- Having A Party [Medley]
- Rome (Wasn't Built In a Day)
- You Send Me
- Shake
- (Chain Gang) The Sound of My Man
- I'm Gonna Forget About You
- When a Boy Falls In Love
- Bring It On Home To Me
- That's Heaven To Me
- Cupid
- Dance What You Wanna
- Meet Me At the Twistin' Place
- I'm Alright
- Wonderful World
- Love You Most of All
- Pow! You're In Love
- A Change is Gonna Come
- Nobody Loves Me Like You
- Somebody Have Mercy
- Win Your Love
- The Smile
- Good Times
- (Ain't That) Good News
- Soothe Me
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0029667062725
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Overview
Previous entries in Ace's Black America Sings series have focused on Bob Dylan and the Beatles, but also Otis Redding -- a singer/songwriter who shows up on Bring It on Home: Black America Sings Sam Cooke singing "Shake," a song that became more identified with Otis than Sam. This alone suggests how great Cooke's legacy is: he wove his way into the very fabric of pop culture, quite clearly influencing generations of soul and rock singers, but also shaping how R&B could cross over into pop, along with the parameters of how black musicians could set up their own independent enterprises in the music business. Cooke's SAR label has been documented elsewhere and, unsurprisingly, some of the acts show up on this 24-track set, but Bring It on Home has greater ambitions than to round up Cooke-associated acts. Certainly, there are some here -- including Bobby Womack's funky 1970 rendition of "I'm Gonna Forget About You," the Soul Stirrers, and Lou Rawls -- but this taps into the smooth strut of his crossover pop, the grit of his gospel, his easy touch with a love song, and his sly ways of breaking down borders, both musical and sociological. As this compilation rolls on, skipping between symphonic singles recorded while Sam was alive and rawer sides from the late '60s and early '70s, what impresses is how far and wide Cooke's influence resonates. Before Motown, he was the one singer who figured out how to bridge the gap not only between the church and the street, but the street and the supper club, all the while without losing touch with his roots. He didn't sell out, he bought in, and by hearing all these wonderful artists who followed his path -- Johnnie Taylor, Eddie Floyd, Smokey Robinson, Brenton Wood, Aretha Franklin, the Supremes, Sam & Dave -- it becomes apparent just how important he was.
Product Details
Release Date: | 11/04/2014 |
---|---|
Label: | Imports |
UPC: | 0029667062725 |
catalogNumber: | 1079912 |
Rank: | 10071 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Rene Hall ConductorJoe Hooven Conductor
Technical Credits
Herb Alpert ComposerSam Cooke Composer,Producer
Steve Cropper Producer
David Axelrod Producer
Marlin Greene Producer
George Jackson Producer
Lou Adler Composer
Roger Armstrong Illustrations
Mickey Buckins Producer
Don Costa Producer
Hal Davis Producer
Lamont Dozier Producer
Ahmet Ertegun Producer
Fred Ford Horn Arrangements,String Arrangements
Isaac Hayes Producer
Rene Hall Arranger
Rick Hall Producer
Brian Holland Producer
Jerry Lawson Producer
Sonny Limbo Producer
Eric Malamud Producer
Arif Mardin Arranger
Chips Moman Producer
David Porter Producer
Maurice Rodgers Producer
Ed Townsend Producer
Jerry Wexler Producer
Clifton White Composer
Hal Winn Producer
Quin Ivy Producer
Tony Rounce Illustrations,Notes Adaption
Joe Hooven Arranger,Producer
Bobby Robinson Producer
Bill Millar Photo Courtesy
Clinton Levert Composer
Ted Stovall String Arrangements
Eric Charge Illustrations
J.W. Alexander Composer
Anthony Gourdine Composer
Dan Greer Producer
Jericho Brown Composer
Betty Prudhomme Composer
Beverly Prudhomme Composer
Marc Gordon Producer
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