T. McCook / U-Roy - Single Barrell / I Can't Lose album flac
Performer: T. McCookTitle: Single Barrell / I Can't Lose
Style: Reggae
Released: 1970
MP3 album: 1674 mb
FLAC album: 1981 mb
Rating: 4.7
Other formats: WAV MP2 DMF MP3 AU TTA DXD
Genre: Reggae
In the early fifties, Tommy was a soloist in the greatest band to coalesce in Jamaica before The Skatalites, Roy Coburn's Blu-Flames featuring Don Drummond, Cluett Johnson and Ken Williams (6). In 1954 he moved to Nassau, Barbados to play gigs in Clubs next to Ernest Ranglin. 1956 he moved to Miami, Florida where he first got into contact with Jazz music.
Can’t be touched Can’t be stopped Can’t be moved Can’t be rocked Can’t be shook We hot When will you niggaz learn. Came to get crunk Came to bring life Came to get it started Came to get it right Turn down the music Turn up my mics When will you niggaz learn. I move when my heart say move Fierce like a lion Got nothing to prove Stubborn as a hot damn mule God in my corner Nigga can’t lose Trying to take me out my hot damn shoes See how quick I jump up and give you bitches the blues They gonna see you on the hot damn news And that.
Tommy McCook - When Something Is Wrong 11. Tommy McCook - Scatterlight Rock One of the rarest, and greatest, horn instrumental dub albums of the seventies featuring the soaring saxophone of Tommy McCook in combination with Glen Brown, ‘The Rhythm Master’, is finally given a legitimate release. It gave music lovers a fascinating opportunity to compare and contrast the work of Tommy McCook, one of the architects and builders of the Jamaican sound, with Glen Brown’s role in taking and breaking it into pieces.
83 bpm, 8B, C major, 2015-06-29, Reggae, Dub, 0 40. Ken Parker. U Roy & The Tommy McCook Quintet.
U-Roy is noted for a melodic style of toasting applied with a highly developed sense of timing. Ewart Beckford was born in Jones Town, Saint Andrews Parish, Kingston, Jamaica, on 21 September 1942. The song was written by John Holt and originally recorded The Paragons, the rocksteady vocal trio of which he was a member, and accompanied by Tommy McCook and the Suspersonic Band. It was produced by Duke Reid and released as a 7-inch single on Reid's Treasure Isle and Trojan labels and as the B-side of the "Only a Smile" single. The song features the violin of "White Rum" Raymond, and was popular in Jamaica and became popular amongst West Indians and skinheads in the UK when a deejay version by U-Roy was released in 1971 .
U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy Mccook. Version Galore, 1970. The Supersonics, U-Roy, U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy McCook - This Station Rule the Nation 02:36. The Supersonics, U-Roy, U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy McCook - Behold 02:53. The Supersonics, U-Roy, U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy McCook - Way Back Home 02:52. The Supersonics, U-Roy, U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy McCook - Words Of Wisdom 02:38. The Supersonics, U-Roy, U-Roy & The Supersonics & Tommy McCook - Mighty Alley 02:25.
Tracklist
| A | –T. McCook* | Single Barrell |
| B | –U-Roy | I Can't Lose |
Companies, etc.
- Recorded At – Treasure Isle Recording Studio
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Matrix / Runout: D.S.R. 5821-1 T.I.S. 008-1
- Matrix / Runout: D.S.R. 5822-1 T.I.S. 409-1









