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Scott was born in Los Angeles, California, US. [1] He is the son of film and television composer Nathan Scott, who had more than 850 television credits and more than 100 film credits as a composer, orchestrator, and conductor, including music for Dragnet and Lassie.
Tom Scott was born in the United Kingdom in 1984, but lived there only briefly before his family moved to New Zealand in 1987. [3] Scott spent most of his childhood in Avondale, Auckland, a town that would become one of the inspirations for the "Avantdale Bowling Club" name. [4] Scott began rapping at the age of ten, initially only as a hobby.
Scott as "Mad Cap'n Tom" in 2010. In 2003, Scott became the official UK organiser of International Talk Like a Pirate Day. In 2008, he was nominated by his friends to run for student president at the University of York Students' Union, under the guise of his Talk Like a Pirate Day persona, "Mad Cap'n Tom Scott". Despite running as a joke, he ...
Tom Scott – woodwinds, reeds; Joe Sample – electric piano; clavinet on "Raised on Robbery" Larry Carlton – electric guitar on all tracks except "Car on a Hill", "Raised on Robbery" and "Trouble Child" Max Bennett – bass guitar on all tracks except "Free Man in Paris", "People's Parties" and "Trouble Child" John Guerin – drums, percussion
It should only contain pages that are Tom Scott (saxophonist) albums or lists of Tom Scott (saxophonist) albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Tom Scott (saxophonist) albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Tom Scott and The L.A. Express is a Jazz/Fusion album released in 1974 by Tom Scott backed by the L.A. Express. Track listing "Bless My Soul" (Scott, Sample, Guerin ...
The song featured new member Joe English on drums, with guest musicians Dave Mason on guitar and Tom Scott on soprano saxophone. [2] It was a number 1 single on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US the week of July 19, 1975 [ 3 ] [ 4 ] and reached number 1 in Canada on the RPM National Top Singles Chart. [ 5 ]
The Allmusic review by Jim Todd awarded the album 1½ stars stating "This 1968 LP from the early days of jazz fusion lacks the seamless merging of styles that would mark the commercial success of Tom Scott's later career. Instead, the 19-year-old reed player and the members of his quartet careen all over the style map – with varying degrees ...