Sam Cooke At the Copa

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Sam Cooke At the Copa album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK // LIVE

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 42:30

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Hua Hsu

eMusic Contributor

Hua Hsu edits the hip-hop section of URB Magazine and writes about music, culture and politics for Slate, the Village Voice, The Wire and various other magazine...more »

08.24.10
An absorbing document of another moment's aspirations, passing in the night
2005 | Label: ABKCO Music & Records, Inc.

As rumor has it, Cooke's early attempts at pop crossover material were frowned upon by his then-label, Specialty, not because of their obvious secularity, but because they took their cues from Gershwin rather than Little Richard. This live set, recorded at New York's stuffy Copacabana club in 1964, is often described as compromise: Cooke stripping his songs of sweat or grainy soul or danger, flattering the polite sensibilities of this audience of white supper clubbers. Still, it's an occasionally fascinating display of Cooke's versatility, as he tries to add a hint of swagger to "The Best Things in Life Are Free," twist out of his band's neat arrangement of "Twistin' the Night Away" or "Blowin' in the Wind" is loving and precise. Cooke never condescends — he just gives them what he thinks they want, and as such, it's an absorbing document of another moment's aspirations, passing in the night.

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A bit disappointing

kevykev12

I love Sam Cooke's voice and think he is one of the top 5 soul singers of all time. However, this album makes me wonder, who stole the soul? I wish I would have read dukewilbury's review, because he nailed it, check out, the one night stand in Harlem, much better. also found on emusic. One last thing, "you send me" is a medley with "try a little tenderness" again without the soul. But hey, it's just my opinion.

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Skip This

dukewilbury

This is perhaps Sam Cooke playing to his audience. In this particular case, the audience were manly affluent and white. Not to put too fine a point on it, but that's just the facts. The band is in fine form, although one may argue, and many have, that the band is in too fine a form. This is Soul music simply because it's Sam's show. A much, much better example of what Sam Cooke was like live can be found on the album Live at the Harlem Square Club. That was a barnstorming, tour-de-force AND Sam was backed up by legendary sax sideman King Curtis. Don't spend your money on this unless you prefer Pat Boone to Elvis.

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They Say All Music Guide

For decades, Sam Cooke at the Copa was a frustrating record. One of a handful of live albums by any major soul artist of its era, it captured Cooke in excellent voice, and was well-recorded — it just wasn’t really a “soul” album, except perhaps in the tamest possible definition of that term. Playing to an upscale, largely white supper-club audience, in a very conservatively run venue where he had previously failed to impress either patrons or the management, Cooke toned down his performance and chose the safest material with which he could still be comfortable. In place of songs like “Feel It,” “Bring It On Home to Me,” or even “Cupid,” which were part of his usual set, he performed numbers like “The Best Things in Life Are Free,” “Bill Bailey,” and “When I Fall in Love” here. True, his renditions may be the versions of any of those songs that any R&B fan will like best, but they always seemed a poor substitute for what’s not here — not just the songs that he didn’t do, but the intense, sweaty presentation, as much a sermon as a concert, the pounding beat, and the crowd being driven into ever-more frenzied delight. All of that is missing, and for decades fans had to content themselves with the contradiction of a beautifully executed live album featuring what might best be called “Sam Cooke lite” — the release of Live at the Harlem Square Club solved that problem, giving us a real Sam Cooke concert, and one of the great soul albums of all time. In the wake of the latter’s release, Sam Cooke at the Copa became much more valuable as a representative of that other side of Cooke’s sound and career — juxtaposed with “Twistin’ the Night Away” were “Frankie and Johnny,” “Try a Little Tenderness,” “Tennessee Waltz,” “This Little Light of Mine” and his performance of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” (the song that inspired his own “A Change Is Gonna Come”), most of which, if he’d done his usual set, most likely wouldn’t exist today in concert versions. By itself, this is still not a representative album, but paired with Live At The Harlem Square Club, it is an irreplaceable document. In June of 2003, Sam Cooke at The Copa was reissued in a brilliant sounding hybrid CD/Super-Audio CD that runs circles around all prior editions of the record. – Bruce Eder

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