The Real American Idol
Arts & Entertainment → Television / Movies
- Author Erik Greene
- Published February 27, 2007
- Word count 636
It was obvious Jimmy McNeal was nervous as he took the stage. He announced to the three American Idol judges he was going to sing "Cupid," a 1961 classic written and recorded by Sam Cooke. As McNeal began to sing, the trio of judges displayed distinctly unique reactions. Randy Jackson stared intently in an attempt to gauge the 23-year-old Texan's talent. Paula Abdul swayed from side to side, her body language expressing approval of McNeal's performance. Only Simon Cowell seemed to notice the fact that McNeal was singing "Another Saturday Night," Sam Cooke's smash hit from1963! Cowell's face was perplexed, but he didn't interrupt. Instead, he allowed the young singer to make the smooth transition from "Another Saturday Night" into "Cupid," and by end of the two-song tribute to Cooke, the AI judges were unanimous in their decision--Jimmy McNeal was headed to Hollywood on the last Golden Ticket of Season 6.
McNeal represents one of the many aspiring singers who recognize the timeless value of Sam Cooke's music. Akron Watson's performance of Cooke's legendary "A Change Is Gonna Come" earlier in the competition helped him advance to the next round, but Watson was asked to leave the show for reasons still unclear. In Season 4, Randy Jackson called David Brown's rendition of "A Change Is Gonna Come" 'the best he's seen' in the four years of the show, and Gedeon McKinney gave a memorable performance of the song in Season 5.
But it was Taylor Hicks who took the crown in Season 5, impressing AI's judges by singing "A Change Is Gonna Come" in his audition and Cooke's "You Send Me" on a night when the theme was "Songs from the Great American Songbook." When Taylor finished You Send Me, Paula Abdul told him "Sam would be proud of you!" Rod Stewart admitted "No one sings this song like Sam Cooke--nobody--but he did a great version."
So why all the fuss about an entertainer who died over 40 years ago and whose Pop career only lasted only eight years? Perhaps Jerry Wexler, Atlantic Records' super-producer to Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles, sums it up best:
"Sam was the best singer who ever lived, no contest. When I listen to him, I still can't believe the things that he did…everything about him was perfection. A perfect case."
Ray Charles himself testified that Sam Cooke "never hit a wrong note."
The son of a Baptist preacher, Sam Cooke was raised in the church. By early 1951, less than three years after his high school graduation, Cooke found himself lead singer of the top gospel group at the time--The Soul Stirrers. His smooth tenor voice dripped honey, and his shows attracted young female fans by the dozens. Cooke was the country's biggest name in Gospel, but he ignored potential ostracism from his fan base and made the transition to popular music in 1956. He gained national prominence with the 1957 release of "You Send Me," an innovative song that combined his gospel roots with a smooth, R&B flavor. The world called the new sound "Soul."
For the next seven years Sam Cooke wrote, arranged, produced, and recorded hit songs not just for himself, but for the artists on the record labels he founded. At the peak of his popularity, his life was tragically cut short under still-mysterious circumstances on December 11, 1964.
What he left behind was a laundry list of soulful, chart-topping hits--most written by Cooke himself--and the world's desire to find another artist of his caliber. American Idol contestants are aware that "holding their own" against a Sam Cooke classic is almost a guarantee to advance to higher rounds. It seems Cooke has set the bar so high that Rod Stewart's comment "No one sings this song like Sam Cooke…but he did a great version" is not an insult, but is indeed the ultimate complement.
Erik Greene is Sam Cooke’s great-nephew. Personally-autographed copies of Our Uncle Sam: The Sam Cooke Story From His Family’s Perspective can be ordered through http://www.ourunclesam.com .
Article source: https://articlebiz.comRate article
Article comments
There are no posted comments.
Related articles
- “The Rise of the Antihero: From Tony Soprano to Joker.”
- Mahadev Book: The Ultimate Destination for Safe and Fast Online Betting
- “When the Camera Lies: The True Stories Behind Hollywood’s Greatest Myths.”
- “Chaos Behind the Camera: Legendary On-Set Feuds and Filmmaking Nightmares That Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “Alternate Reels: How Cinema Might Have Changed if History Rolled Differently.”
- “Madness Behind the Magic: The Wildest Hollywood Productions That Almost Never Made It to Screen.”
- “Francis Ford Coppola: Genius and Chaos in the Making of a Hollywood Legend.”
- Why the ARRI Alexa Mini Still Outnumbers Every 4K Flagship on Professional Sets
- “Marlon Brando: The Actor Who Changed Hollywood Forever.”
- “The Genius and the Scandal: Woody Allen’s Films and the Shadows Behind Them.”
- “Leonardo DiCaprio: The Reluctant Star Who Redefined Hollywood Stardom.”
- “Behind the Curtain: The Private World of Raymond Burr.”
- “From Pixels to Projectors: How Video Games Reshaped Modern Cinema.”
- “The Art of the Slow Burn: Revisiting 1970s American Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Navigating Nostalgia and Novelty in The Matrix Resurrections.”
- “Sin and Celluloid: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Scandalous Films Before the Censors Arrived.”
- North by Northwest: The Movie That Made Danger Look Effortlessly Cool.
- “Beyond the Lens: How Women Directors, Producers, and Writers Are Reshaping Cinema.”
- “Riding the Ponderosa: The Enduring Legacy of Bonanza.”
- “Beyond the Gavel: Cinema’s Most Compelling Courtroom Dramas.”
- Denzel Washington: Crafting a Legacy of Strength, Gravitas, and Change.
- “Blood, Power, and Legacy: The Godfather Trilogy’s Triumphs and Tragedies.”
- Visionaries Beyond Tomorrow: The Five Directors Who Reimagined Sci-Fi Cinema.
- “Greta Gerwig and the Rise of Women Behind the Camera in Hollywood.”
- “The Crown of Cinema: From Citizen Kane to The Godfather.”
- The Evolution of James Bond: Six Decades of Cinema’s Most Enduring Spy.
- The Man Behind the Cape: The Life and Tragic Fall of George Reeves.
- The 24-290 mm Paradox: Why a 12× Zoom from 2001 Still Outresolves Today’s 8K Sensors
- The 100 mm Paradox: Why the “Boring” Focal Length Is Quietly Becoming the Most Dangerous Tool on Set