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He was a bass guiter player, guitarist and producer born
Thomas Clark Cogbill in Johnson Grove, Tennessee, who learned to play the
guitar when he was six years old and progressed to the bass and other
instruments through the years.
He joined a rhythm section quintet who became highly sought after
for studio and session work and soon they would be appearing in Muscle
Shoals in Alabama, New York, Memphis and Nashville and in 1967 one of the
guitarists, Chips Moman, bought the American Sound Studios in Memphis which
would become like a magnet for artists wanting them to perform on their
recordings. He regularly worked closely with
some of the best known names in the business in the recording studio
and his personal style of bass playing has appeared on many hit
singles that include "In the Ghetto" and "Kentucky Rain" by Elvis
Presley
, "Son
of a Preacher Man" by Dusty Springfield, "Funky Broadway" by Wilson
Pickett, "Respect", "Chain of Fools" and "(You Make Me Feel Like a) Natural
Woman" by Aretha Franklin and "Cry Like a Baby" by the Box Tops. Albums that he appeared on are
numerous but a selection of them include Wilson Pickett's Greatest Hits and
Wicket Pickett by Wilson Pickett, Best of Esther Phillips,
Living & Dying in 3/4 Time, A1A and Rancho Deluxe by Jimmy
Buffett
, Suspicious Minds, Live a Little, Love a Little, From
Nashville to Memphis: The Essential 60s Masters by Elvis
Presley , In
My Lifetime, And The Singer Sings His Song, Gold and Greatest Hits by Neil
Diamond
, Rare & Unreleased Recordings from the Golden Reign,
Aretha Arrives, Lady Soul and 30 Greatest Hits by Aretha Franklin,
RCA Country Legends by Waylon Jennings, Sojourner by Larry Jon
Wilson, Seven by Bob
Seger , Breakaway by Kris
Kristofferson & Rita
Coolidge
, Anthology by Bobby Womack, Troubadour by
J.J, Cale, Classic & Unreleased Collection by Willie Nelson, Dusty
in Memphis by Dusty Springfield and Home in Your Heart by
Solomon Burke . Deciding that he would also like
to take a stab at production work, one of his successes was "Sweet
Caroline" by Neil
Diamond
.
In 1982 he suffered a stroke in Nashville, Tennessee, which would
take his life when he was just 50 years old.
Sources:
- http://www.bassplayer.com/article/dusty-springfields-son/feb-06/18128
- http://www.elvispedia.org/index.php?title=Tommy_Cogbill
- http://www.buffettnews.com/bandmember30.html
- http://shopping.yahoo.com/p:Tommy%20Cogbill:1927050261
- http://www.discogs.com/artist/Tommy+Cogbill
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