Search - Sam Cooke :: Portrait of a Legend

Portrait of a Legend
Sam Cooke
Portrait of a Legend
Genres: Pop, R&B, Gospel
 
  •  Track Listings (30) - Disc #1


     

CD Details

All Artists: Sam Cooke
Title: Portrait of a Legend
Members Wishing: 5
Total Copies: 0
Label: Msi Music/Super D
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 10/18/2005
Album Type: Import
Genres: Pop, R&B, Gospel
Styles: Oldies, Soul
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 018771926429, 0602498074466, 0602498724187, 602498074466, 602498319185

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Member CD Reviews

Anne H. from HOLLY SPRINGS, NC
Reviewed on 9/26/2006...
Great sounds and sounds great!
DEBORAH B. (BLANTOND) from SUMMERVILLE, SC
Reviewed on 7/26/2006...
30 TRACKS. VERY ENJOYABLE.

CD Reviews

Excellent Compilation of a Real Legend's Body of Work
Leonard Fleisig | Here, there and everywhere | 11/19/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"
The word legend is tossed around too casually today. It seems to be applied in liberal doses even to one-hit wonders. Sam Cooke, and his body of exquisite work, is one performer truly deserving of the title legend. This CD, "Sam Cooke, Portrait of a Legend" does a fine job in putting the best of Sam in one CD.



There are quite a few Sam Cooke compilations out there but I think this one does as good a job as any in actually providing a portrait that extends beyond just his better known hits. Cooke, the son of a preacher and like many of his fellow 'soul-singers' started his career in Gospel. Cooke's gospel roots are evident in many of his great hits, including Bring it on Home to Me and A Change is Gonna Come. However, most Cooke compilations do not contain selections of his time as a lead singer with the Soul Stirrers, a Gospel Group.



This CD starts off with Touch the Hem of His Garment. This beautiful Gospel tune, written by Cooke, provides a nice entry point for the popular hits that follow. Those hits, including You Send Me, Only Sixteen, Shake, Twistin the Night Away, and Another Saturday Night are included in the compilation.



Although his upbeat tunes remain fresh and enjoyable, I think Cooke is at his best when he reaches down and evokes the more somber notes, when the blues begin to mix in with his soul. His Sad Mood remains a beautifully moving piece. Equally compelling is Bring it on Home to Me. His long time friend Lou Rawls provides the harmony and the call and refrain of the song evoke Cooke's earlier gospel work.



Equally stunning is Cooke's A Change is Gonna Come. Written in 1964 at the height of the civil rights movement and deeply influenced by Dylan's Blowin in the Wind, A Change if Gonna Come always leaves me feeling that this song represents the innermost part of Cooke's soul.



The CD ends with a return to Cooke's gospel roots, Jesus Gave Me Water. This closing track, by returning us to Sam's gospel beginnings is a fitting conclusion to the CD.



The CD contains excellent liner notes prepared by peter Guralnick. Guralnick is writing a biography of Cooke and these notes reflect his deep interest in the man and his music.



This is an excellent compilation. It does Cooke proud.



"
Soulful Songs And Stories Cooked Up On Essential Hits Set
Anthony G Pizza | FL | 09/16/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This 30-song, one disc collection is Sam Cooke's most lovingly presented and essential single disc released to date. It builds on his 2LP "Man and His Music," itself a revelation when released in the mid-1980s. This set tops it due to remastered sound (this CD has a layer playable in Sony's SACD format), and R&B scholar/author Peter Guralnick's detailed liner notes. Guralnick, author of several books on Southern rock and soul, examines the roots of all 30 songs, performers backing and dueting with Cooke, his inspirations for writing and singing them.This is important because Sam Cooke's songwriting and storytelling skills are as much his legacy as his Gospel music beginnings, his mysterious, untimely 1964 murder, and his influence on Steve Perry (whose "Lovin' Touchin', Squeezin" was a Cooke tribute of sorts), Rod Stewart (who claimed he listened only to Cooke records for two whole years as a teen), Terrence Trent D'Arby and a generation's rock and R&B singers. Cooke's chart hits are here, except for the relatively minor "Soothe Me" and "Frankie & Johnny." You get his gentle, intricate vocal trills on his first singles for the Keen in the 1950s (1957's #1 "You Send Me," "Wonderful World," "Cupid"). You get his rethinks of country, blues, even pop standards ("Tennessee Waltz" becomes a gospel rave up; "Little Red Rooster" a slow churn blues with a teenage Billy Preston's extra cheesy organ, "Summertime" a vocal showcase with offbeat rhythm and guitar). Finally, you get Cooke's rollicking humor and detailed lyrics on his dance hits ("Shake," the dancers' garb and moves in "Twistin' the Night Away," the hip DJ requests in "Havin' A Party.")Guralnick refers often to Cooke's phrasing, which found soul and poetry approximating daily speech. On his greatest artistic achievement, 1964's finale "A Change is Gonna Come," Cooke tops even himself. He takes Bob Dylan's lyrical challenge in "Blowin' In The Wind" (which Cooke admired for being written and performed as pop by whites) and, through hopeful words sung as near-weeping laments, he approximates the timbre and granduer of Dr. Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech given less than a year before."Portrait" set is bookended with Cooke leading Gospel's legendary Soul Stirrers for two songs. They not only define soul's gospel roots but showed Cooke sang a great Bible story as easily as from a cha-cha crowded dance floor, highway prison road gang, or lonely room. For more, reach for his dark, mellow "Night Beat" or the "Man Who Invented Soul" multi-disc. Ultimately, "Portrait" underrates itself; it's more like a small, soulful slice-of=life gallery from one of music's seminal artists."