Product Details
Sam Cooke - Greatest Hits

Sam Cooke - Greatest Hits
Sam Cooke

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Product Description

You'll be "Twistin' the Night Away" with this collection of pop and R&B classics by the legendary soul singer, Sam Cooke. Included are "You Send Me," "Another Saturday Night," "Everybody Loves to Cha Cha Cha" and "Cupid."
No Track Information Available
Media Type: CD
Artist: COOKE,SAM
Title: GREATEST HITS
Street Release Date: 02/24/1998
Domestic
Genre: OLDIES

Track Listing

  1. You Send Me
  2. (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons
  3. You Were Made for Me
  4. Win Your Love for Me
  5. Love You Most of All
  6. Everybody Loves to Cha Cha Cha
  7. Only Sixteen
  8. Wonderful World
  9. Chain Gang
  10. Sad Mood
  11. That's It, I Quit, I'm Movin' On
  12. Cupid
  13. Twistin' the Night Away
  14. Having a Party
  15. Bring It on Home to Me
  16. Sugar Dumpling
  17. Nothing Can Change This Love
  18. Somebody Have Mercy
  19. Send Me Some Lovin'
  20. Frankie and Johnny
  21. Little Red Rooster

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1661 in Music
  • Brand: COOKE,SAM
  • Released on: 1998-02-24
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Now we have Greatest Hits, a 22-song collection of Cooke's pop hits in addition to the 13-song Best Of collection and the 28-song The Man and His Music. Only The Man comes close to presenting a complete portrait of the legendary soul singer: At least there are examples of Cooke's gospel and R&B material. (Any collection without "A Change is Gonna Come" is an automatic failure.) Cooke's melodious voice and deft songwriting touch are worthy of more than a single-disc compilation. If you want just the pop smashes, the sublime ballads, and infectious mellow grooves, this set will suffice. Otherwise, The Man offers a more comprehensive and well-rounded look at Cooke's legacy. --Marc Greilsamer


Customer Reviews

Good News, Bad News5
With 1986's The Man And His Music out of print, the release of Greatest Hits is a case of good news, bad news.

Good News: It updates and expands on the CD version of 1962's The Best Of by adding eight more tracks. You get early minor hits like "You Were Made for Me" and "Love You Most of All" (both from 1958). You also get later hits like "Send Me Some Lovin'," "Frankie and Johnny" (yes, it's on the CD, even though it's not listed by Amazon) and "The Little Red Rooster" all Top 20 hits from 1963. You even get his final Top 40 hit, "Sugar Dumpling," which was released posthumously in 1965.

Bad News: Unlike The Man And His Music, Greatest Hits completely ignores Cooke's gospel music and even more dumbfounding is the omission of "Another Saturday Night," "Shake" (his last two Top Ten hits) and the socially conscious "A Change Is Gonna Come." [Who was asleep at the switch when that decision was made?] Fortunately, I still have my cassette version of The Man And His Music, but until that title gets re-released, Greatest Hits is the current best alternative. RECOMMENDED

Almost all of his classics4
You can never really go wrong with a Sam Cooke album. This is no exception.The CD contains a good number of his 'hits'. Cooke works for just about any mood I happpen to be in. I often get in my car, pop in this CD, click on "Bring It On Home To Me" and just keep playing that song over and over. For you trivia buffs out there - that's Lou Rawls doing the harmony with Cooke on this track. You Send Me, Wonderful World, Twistin the NIght Away - work well for those upbeat moments. All in all - a CD worth buying.

Super soul4
Cooke, often acknowledged as the definitive soul singer, gets some of his catalog back on CD with this generous single-disc collection. This piece is packed with his Keen and RCA hits up to 1964 but having had 31 charted pop singles up to that point, by necessity some of the lower-charting sides are not here. The major disappointment though, is the lack of any of Cooke's material after 1963. Unfortunately, his catalog for that post-1963 material is in the hands of ABKCO music which stubbornly refuses to license anything to anyone else and at the same time has often neglected to issue the material themselves - the Cameo/Parkway catalog is probably the most infamous example of this idiocy. Nevertheless, for as far as it can go, this is an excellent compilation of this magnificent soul singer's recordings. The mastering has been vastly improved over past attempts at this material with many of the tracks in true stereo, the remainder (1-3,5,8) in mono. By far, the best single-disc presentation of this soul icon's musical career.