Bob Marley & The Wailers ADD

Alvin 'Seeco' Patterson - Percussionist with Bob Marley & The Wailers passes away at 90

11/02/2021 by Tomaz Jardim

Alvin 'Seeco' Patterson - Percussionist with Bob Marley & The Wailers passes away at 90

Rest in Peace: Alvin 'Seeco' Patterson (December 30, 1930 - November 1, 2021)

After a truly remarkable life, Alvin “Seeco” Patterson, percussionist for Bob Marley and the Wailers, passed away yesterday (November 1, 2021) in Kingston at age 90.  
 
Although known to the world as “Seeco”, he was in fact born Francisco Willie, in Havana, Cuba, on December 30, 1930 to a Jamaican father and Panamanian mother. He took Alvin Patterson as a stage name, and acquired the nickname “Seeco” as a bastardisation of his birth name Francisco. He was also referred to at times as “Willy Pep”. As a child, Patterson emigrated to Jamaica with his parents, and lived first in Westmorland, where his father farmed, but then moved on to Kingston with his mother, after his parent’s marriage dissolved. As a young man, Patterson found work as a bauxite miner. In 1957, however, Patterson attempted to emigrate to the United States in search of better work. In the midst of his move, however, the historic Kendal train crash occurred in Jamaica on September 1st, prompting Patterson to return to the island to seek out relatives he feared might have been among the nearly 200 dead and 700 injured. His plans to emigrate were then permanently put on hold, and he returned to Kingston, and to the life of a Bauxite miner.  
 
It was around this time that Patterson first met a teenage Bob Marley, who was fifteen years Patterson’s junior, and living in the same Trenchtown slums. Marley took note of Patterson because of his famed cricket bowling abilities, and began to follow Patterson around, in search of both cricket skills, and likely also a fatherly figure.  
 
Patterson and Marley grew immensely close and forged a bond that would last until the end of Marley’s life. Patterson encouraged Marley as he began to experiment with singing, as Patterson himself had gained experience in the musical realm playing percussion with famed calypso artist Lord Flea, and with other mento-calypso combos. And it was Patterson who would first take the newly-formed Wailers group, consisting of Marley, along with Peter Tosh and Bunny Livingston, to Coxsone Dodd’s Studio One for their first audition, in July 1964. The resulting recording session, which took place only after Coxsone’s initial rejection of the Wailers, produced the hit single Simmer Down - - the record which launched Marley’s career.  
 
As the Wailers rose in prominence on the Jamaican scene, Patterson continued to work in the Bauxite mines. In 1966, however, while Marley was working in the United States, Patterson was injured in a mine accident, when the gas line running under the canteen floor ruptured, causing an explosion that left a number of miners seriously injured. Patterson was thrown from the room and lost his shoes in the process. When Marley returned to the island some weeks later, he convinced Patterson to give up mining, and to begin working in music more regularly. As a result, Patterson began to  contribute percussion tracks to a number of Wailers cuts. His first known contribution was on the June, 1967 session which produced Lyrical Satyrical I and This Train, and was released on the Wailers’ own Wail N Soul M label.  
 
While Patterson’s role in the original Wailers that still featured Tosh and Livingston was small, his contributions gradually increased. When the Marley, Tosh and Livingston went on their first (and only) tour of the UK in 1973, Patterson acted as roadie. When Marley’s association with Tosh and Livingston ended that year, however, Patterson became a core member of the newly formed Wailers band under Marley’s direction, and contributed to every recording and live performance that Marley would make for the rest of his career. Patterson’s inventive style added depth to Marley’s recordings, and acted as an anchor to keep Marley’s music grounded in the roots tradition. Patterson’s milk bottle on Jamming, and his call-and-answer percussion sounds on Crazy Baldheads are amongst the best examples of his style and simple greatness. Although not credited, Patterson is believed to have contributed to the writing of a number of Marley’s songs, including Work.

Throughout Marley’s career, Patterson was seldom far from his side. In September of 1980, Patterson was with Marley when he collapsed jogging in Central Park in September of 1980,  and remained with Marley through his cancer treatment both in New York and then at the Issels Clinic in Bavaria.  
 
Following Marley’s death, Patterson continued to live in Kingston and play with the Wailers Band until the 1990s.