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Rhythm Section Radio was founded in 2009 and moved to NTS in 2012, and has since pulled out the stops breaking new music, promoting independent labels and paying homage to the greatest music from the past, through a perhaps unhealthy obsession with record digging.

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Zoot Simms

Zoot Simms

Zoot Simms has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 13 episodes and was first played on 30 April 2014.

Noel Bartholomew Simms (1935 - 3 February 2017), often known by his nickname Scully, was a Jamaican ska, rocksteady and reggae percussionist and singer.

On recordings, he is credited under many different names, including: Mr. Foundation, Zoot Sims, Noel "Scully" Simms, Noel "Skully" Simms, Scully, Scully Simms, Skullie, Skully, Skully Simms, Zoot "Scully" Simms, Mikey Spratt, Scollie, mr foundation and Skitter.

Born in the Smith Village area of Kingston in 1935 and educated at the Alpha Boys School, he initially worked as a singer in a duo with his schoolfriend Arthur "Bunny" Robinson, known as Simms & Robinson and later Bunny & Scully. The duo won the Vere Johns talent contest two years running and were the first Jamaican artists to make R&B records on the island, starting with acetates for sound system use in 1953 (previous Jamaican-made singles were calypso). They went on to release singles in the early 1960s for producer Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, with Simms also recording solo sides for Prince Buster, and as part of another duo, Simms & Elmond. He was one of the first Jamaican musicians to use Amharic phrases in songs after learning them from Rasta leader Mortimer Planno, with tracks such as "Golden Pen" and "Press Along" in the early 1960s.

As a percussionist he has performed as a member of several bands, including The Aggrovators, The Upsetters, The Revolutionaries, and Roots Radics, and has recorded and performed with Big Youth, Peter Tosh (playing in the All-Star Band at the One Love Peace Concert), Dillinger and The Heptones, playing on more than 200 albums between 1971 and 1985. He toured Europe with The Jamaica All Stars along with Justin Hinds, Johnny "Dizzy" Moore and Sparrow Martin. He also played in a backing band for Jimmy Cliff.

Despite losing his sight, he was still recording in the mid-2000s and writing songs including "Africa for the Africans".

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Zoot Simms

Zoot Simms has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 13 episodes and was first played on 30 April 2014.

Noel Bartholomew Simms (1935 - 3 February 2017), often known by his nickname Scully, was a Jamaican ska, rocksteady and reggae percussionist and singer.

On recordings, he is credited under many different names, including: Mr. Foundation, Zoot Sims, Noel "Scully" Simms, Noel "Skully" Simms, Scully, Scully Simms, Skullie, Skully, Skully Simms, Zoot "Scully" Simms, Mikey Spratt, Scollie, mr foundation and Skitter.

Born in the Smith Village area of Kingston in 1935 and educated at the Alpha Boys School, he initially worked as a singer in a duo with his schoolfriend Arthur "Bunny" Robinson, known as Simms & Robinson and later Bunny & Scully. The duo won the Vere Johns talent contest two years running and were the first Jamaican artists to make R&B records on the island, starting with acetates for sound system use in 1953 (previous Jamaican-made singles were calypso). They went on to release singles in the early 1960s for producer Clement "Coxsone" Dodd, with Simms also recording solo sides for Prince Buster, and as part of another duo, Simms & Elmond. He was one of the first Jamaican musicians to use Amharic phrases in songs after learning them from Rasta leader Mortimer Planno, with tracks such as "Golden Pen" and "Press Along" in the early 1960s.

As a percussionist he has performed as a member of several bands, including The Aggrovators, The Upsetters, The Revolutionaries, and Roots Radics, and has recorded and performed with Big Youth, Peter Tosh (playing in the All-Star Band at the One Love Peace Concert), Dillinger and The Heptones, playing on more than 200 albums between 1971 and 1985. He toured Europe with The Jamaica All Stars along with Justin Hinds, Johnny "Dizzy" Moore and Sparrow Martin. He also played in a backing band for Jimmy Cliff.

Despite losing his sight, he was still recording in the mid-2000s and writing songs including "Africa for the Africans".

Original source: Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

We Can Talk It Over
Zoot Simms
Coxsone Records0
Oppression
Alton, Zoot
Ackee1972
African Challenge
Zoot Simms
Studio One0
Tit For Tat
Zoot Simms
Supreme Records1969
Bye Bye Baby
Zoot Simms
Coxsone Records1968
African Challenge
Zoot Simms
Studio One0
Small Garden
Zoot Sims
Soul Jazz Records2005