The Skatalites
are a ska band from Jamaica. They played initially between 1963 and 1965, and recorded many of their best known songs in the period, including "Guns of Navarone". They also played on records by Prince Buster and many other Jamaican artists who recorded during the period. They reformed in 1983 and have played together ever since.
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THE SKATALITES TICKETS
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History
Before the Skatalites: 1954-1964
The founders of the Skatalites were
Tommy McCook (died 1998),
Rolando Alphonso (died 1998),
Lloyd Brevett,
Lloyd Knibb,
Lester Sterling,
Don Drummond (died 1969),
Jah Jerry Haynes (died 2007),
Jackie Mittoo (died 1990),
Johnny Moore (died 2008) and
Jackie Opel (died 1970). These ten musicians started to play together from 1955, when Kingston's recording studios started to develop. Tommy McCook was the first member of the band to record, though not for commercial release: he played with Don Hitchman's Group in 1953.
Archie Lindo asked Hitchman to play few tunes for his pioneer radio station, "ZQI", on their new equipment. Soon after that, sound system pioneer Stanley Motta began to operate his studio, where he recorded
calypso and
mento that were released on 78's. Rolando Alphonso was one of the first to record with him, probably in 1954.
Though McCook was the first in the band to record, he did not participate in the recording sessions with the other nine musicians. He left Jamaica in 1954 for a jazz gig at the Zanzibar Club in
Nassau, Bahamas. He returned to Jamaica in June of 1962, and began playing regular jazz sessions around Kingston.
Coxsone Dodd searched for jazz players around Kingston and was impressed by McCook's playing. Tommy McCook heard some ska, but initially resisted Coxsone Dodd's offers to record and to lead a studio group, because he was a committed jazzman. In 1962 Dodd released
I Cover The Waterfront
(Port-O-Jam) with Roland Alphonso and Don Drummond, who did the solo and brass sections. In 1963 he released
Jazz Jamaica From the Workshop
(Port-O-Jam/Studio One), on which McCook played for the first time since returning to Jamaica. Don Drummond has two tunes on
Jazz Jamaica
and McCook has one, "The Answer".
Early years: 1964-1965
In spring 1964, The Skatalites recorded their first
LP Ska Authentic
at
Studio One in
Kingston and toured Jamaica as the creators of ska. Their producers were
Coxsone Dodd,
Duke Reid,
Prince Buster, Vincent "King" Edwards, Justin "Phillip" Yap,
Leslie Kong, Lindon Pottinger,
Sonia Pottinger and
Vincent "Randy" Chin. The Skatalites led sessions with top artists and worked with young talents such as
Delroy Wilson,
Desmond Dekker,
The Wailers,
Lee Perry, etc.
They played their first show on 27 June at the Hi-Hat club, on Water Lane in Rae Town, which was owned and operated by Orville "Billy" Farnum. Coxsone Dodd helped initially: "At the formation of the band, I supplied the PA system, microphones and what ever it is. Also the guitar amplifier and other amplifier. I helped with transportation and I supplied storage for equipment and instruments. I was a part of promoting the first gigs and other gigs to get it off the ground, because I figured more or less, if I am recording the Skatalites, its good to get them popular out in the streets, yunno?"
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In fall 1964, Don Drummond's composition, "Man In The Street", entered the Top 10 in the UK. Trombonist Drummond had at least 200 tunes to his name by 1965. In January 1, 1965, Don Drummond was jailed for the murder of his girlfriend, Anita "Marguerita" Mahfood. He was later convicted and remanded to the Bellevue Asylum.
In August, 1965, The Skatalites played their last show. They broke up into two
supergroups, Rolando Alphonso and the Soul Vendors and Tommy McCook and the Supersonics. In early 1967, Don Drummond's ska adaptation of the theme to the film
The Guns of Navarone
entered the UK Top 10. Don Drummond died in
May 6,
1969, in the Bellevue Asylum.
Reunion: 1983-1998
In June 1983, The Skatalites reformed and played
Reggae Sunsplash festival in
Montego Bay in July. Their show was very successful and the band played more concerts in Jamaica while taking offers to tour abroad. Their rehearsal sessions resulted in a clutch of new songs which were recorded in Music Mountain Studio but only released in 2007 on Motion Records (as 'Rolling Steady: The 1983 Music Mountain Sessions'). The album included their tribute to Don Drummond, 'Big Trombone', with Lord Tanamo on vocals. In April 1984, The Skatalites recorded a second reunion album,
The Return of The Big Guns
, released on
Mango Records in the U.K. In
July 7, 1984, The Skatalites played to thousands at
Selhurst Park during the London Sunsplash. The Skatalites played seven tunes and also backed Prince Buster on three before closing with a reprise of their theme song, "Freedom Sounds".
Between 1985 and 1988, the core members of the Skatalites emigrated and united in the northeast of the United States. They played their first US concert at
The Village Gate and began to play spotted dates in Northeast US.
In April 1989, The Skatalites supported Bunny Wailer's Liberation Tour featuring 7 original members: Tommy McCook, Roland Alphonso, Lester Sterling, Johnny Moore, Jackie Mittoo, Lloyd Brevett, and Lloyd Knibb with special guests Dion Knibb on vocals, Devon James on guitar, and Ken Stewart on keyboards. In January 1990, The Skatalites did their first headline tour of the US with the same lineup except Jackie Mittoo and Lester Sterling. In
December 16, 1990,
Jackie Mittoo died in
Toronto, Canada from cancer. Between 1991 and 1993, The Skatalites continued touring the US and in 1992 did their first tour of Europe.
In 1993,
Skavoovee
was released in the US on
Shanachie Records and in Japan as McCooke's Book. The
Skavoovee
tour featuring The Skatalites,
Special Beat,
The Selecter, and
The Toasters tours the US.The Skatalites were nominated for a
Grammy Award in the category of Best Reggae Album twice: In January 1996, for their 1995 Shanachie release,
Hi-Bop Ska
and in January 1997, for their 1996 Shanachie release,
Greetings From Skamania
.
In 1997, The Skatalites released
Ball of Fire
on
Island Records with special guest
Ernest Ranglin on guitar. In
May 5,
1998, Tommy McCook died near his home in
Lithonia, Georgia. In
November 17, 1998, Rolando Alphonso died at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in
Los Angeles, California.
Band without McCook and Alphonso: 1999-present
In
March 27,
1999,
Cedric Brooks (tenor sax) joined The Skatalites and in May 2000, The Skatalites record a new album at
The Hit Factory in
Miami with 15 original tracks with special guest
Ken Boothe on a vocal track. On
December 26 and 27, 2001, The Skatalites recorded new album in
Paris at
Davout Studios for
Melodie Records and released as
From Paris With Love
on
April 15, 2002. In February 2002, The Skatalites began their World Tour, visiting USA, Europe,
Mexico,
Venezuela,
Puerto Rico,
Russia and Japan which lasted 9 months.
In April 2003, The Skatalites return to the studio with
Toots Hibbert to record a contribution to his new
True Love album. They rerecord "Never Grow Old" song with
Terry Hall and
U-Roy. This album also features many special guests including
Willie Nelson,
Bonnie Raitt,
Eric Clapton et al. This album subsequently won the Grammy for 2004. In March 2004, The Skatalites announced the beginning of their 40th Anniversary tour including
Colombia,
Greece and
Singapore, in addition to the usual global stops.
Vin Gordon and
Karl Bryan joined the band.
In April 2005, The Skatalites started new World Tour with their new bass player
Val Douglas, whose A-Team band was the primary backing band for Reggae Sunsplash Tours through the 1980s and 1990s. The Skatalites continue to be composed of the top musicians in their genre, as they have from the beginning. In October 2005, The Skatalites released
The Skatalites in Orbit, Vol.1
recorded live in
Buenos Aires.
In March 2006, The Skatalites played at La Bal De La Rose for
Caroline, Princess of Hanover, along with
Jimmy Cliff,
The Wailers and
Alpha Blondy. This show started the 2006 Global Orbit Tour reaching
Australia,
New Zealand,
Chile and
Argentina. In April 2006, Skatalites recorded 11 new tunes and one cover in
Byron Bay, Australia at the
301 Studios. The new release "On The Right Track" is forthcoming.
In May 2007,
On The Right Track
was released worldwide by
AIM International, Australia. In September 2007, The Skatalites contributed the track "Be My Guest" with
Ben Harper on vocals for the new
Fats Domino tribute CD
Going Home
featuring numerous artists. This CD raised funds for all the musicians affected by Hurricane Katrina.
Band members
Current members
- Lloyd Knibb
- Doreen Shaffer
- Lester Sterling
- Devon James
- Kevin Batchelor
- Cedric "IM" Brooks
- Val Douglas
- Vin Gordon
Former members
- Tommy McCook
- Rolando Alphonso
- Lloyd Brevett
- Don Drummond
- Jah Jerry Haynes
- Jackie Mittoo
- Johnny Moore
- Jackie Opel
Discography
- Ska Authentic
(ND Records, 1964)
- Ska Authentic, Vol. 2
(Studio One, 1967)
- The Legendary Skatalites (1975)
- African Roots
(United Artists, 1978)
- Scattered Lights
(Alligator, 1984)
- Return of the Big Guns
(Island, 1984)
- With Sly & Robbie & Taxi Gang
(Vista, 1984)
- Stretching Out
live (ROIR, 1987)
- Hog in a Cocoa
(Culture Press, 1993)
- I'm in the Mood for Ska
(Trojan, 1993)
- Ska Voovee
(Shanachie, 1993)
- Hi-Bop Ska
(Shanachie, 1994)
- In the Mood for Ska
(Trojan, 1995)
- Greetings from Skamania
(Shanachie, 1996)
- The Skatalite!
(Jet Set, 1997)
- Foundation Ska
(Heartbeat / Pgd, 1997)
- Ball of Fire (album)
(Island, 1998)
- Bashaka (album)
Marston Recording Corporatoion (2000) (Producer Stamma Haughton)
- Nucleus of Ska
(Music Club, 2001)
- Herb Dub, Collie Dub
(Motion, 2001)
- The Legendary Skatalites In Dub (Motion, 2002)
- Ska Splash
(Moonska, 2002)
- Lucky Seven (album)
(2002)
- From Paris With Love
(World Village, 2002)
- Celebration
(Studio One, 2002)
- Ska-ta-shot
(2002)
- Guns Of Navarone - Best Of Skatalites
(2003)
- In Orbit vol.1 - Live from Argentina
(2005)
- Rolling Steady: The 1983 Music Mountain Sessions (Motion, 2007)
- On the Right Track
(AIM, 2007)
References
- A Brief History of the Skatalites