I know a change gonna come, yes it will

It’s been called one of rock and roll’s greatest mysteries.

It’s certainly one of its greatest tragedies.

Sixty years ago this week, at a seedy motel in South Central Los Angeles, the popular and extraordinarily gifted singer Sam Cooke was shot to death, apparently by the motel manager, who claimed self-defense. Cooke was 33 years old.

Friends, family members, journalists and attorneys have all publicly speculated in the years since that the slapdash police investigation, difficult-to-fathom circumstances and suspicious business relationships surrounding Cooke’s ignominious end all point to some sort of conspiracy. The 2017 documentary “Lady, You Shot Me: The Life and Death of Sam Cooke” examines the dubious nature of his violent death and concludes, in his nephew Eugene Jamison’s words, “It just doesn’t make sense.”

By 1964, Cooke had become the #1 black musical artist in the country, with an impressive run of more than 25 hit singles on the Billboard Top 40 pop charts, 20 of which were also Top Ten on the R&B charts. His first big single, “You Send Me,” reached #1 in 1957, and was followed by such classics as “Wonderful World,” “Chain Gang,””Cupid,” “Twistin’ the Night Away,” “Bring It On Home To Me,” “Havin’ A Party,” “Another Saturday Night” and “(Ain’t That) Good News,” among many others. He not only recorded these iconic tracks, he wrote them, published them and produced them in an era when black artists simply didn’t have that kind of clout.

From his early days as a gospel singer with The Soul Stirrers in the ’40s and early ’50s through his switch to secular musical styles in the late ’50s and early ’60s, Cooke was a keen observer of the music business. He had seen how artists, particularly black artists, had been cheated out of royalties and underpaid for live performances by unscrupulous managers, agents and record label moguls, and he was adamant that he wasn’t going to suffer that same fate. He founded his own publishing company, his own label and began amassing both wealth and power that upset the dynamic of the industry.

And yet Cooke still was taken advantage of by those he trusted — in particular, the notorious Allen Klein, who became involved in Cooke’s affairs in 1963 and engaged in shady dealings to wrest control of Cooke’s copyrights. (Klein infamously later mismanaged the finances of The Rolling Stones and The Beatles, who found themselves mired in lawsuits and countersuits with Klein for years on end.)

In a 2019 article in The Guardian by investigative reporter Ellen Jones, she wrote, “The week before (Cooke) died, he was planning to confront Klein over altered contracts and official documents. Could Cooke’s willingness to stand up to powerful vested interests have been a factor in his murder? Isn’t it time some enterprising filmmaker did a deep dive into Cooke’s death?”

In my view, “Lady You Shot Me” provides a pretty convincing case that the matter needs a thorough, official investigation, which had been continually obstructed by Klein before his own death in 2009 at age 77. When I watched the documentary last week on Amazon Prime, I grew angrier by the minute as the facts and informed opinions were presented. I urge my readers to make up their minds by watching the piece themselves, but I daresay you’ll draw the same outraged conclusion I did.

Cooke’s Wikipedia entry calls him “one of the greatest singers and most accomplished vocalists of all time. His incredibly pure tenor voice was big, velvety and expansive, with an instantly recognizable tone. Cooke’s pitch was remarkable, and his manner of singing was effortlessly soulful.”

Major stars of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s — iconic names like Otis Redding, James Brown, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Paul McCartney, Tina Turner, Steve Perry, Rod Stewart, Al Green, Mick Jagger and Diana Ross — have each praised Cooke as “hugely influential” in the development of their own singing styles.

As a student of rock music of the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, I’m sheepish to admit that I was late to the party when it comes to Sam Cooke. I was too young to have known about him while he was still alive (I was only nine when he died), but I didn’t even become aware of his name until the early ’80s. I recall seeing a cheesy TV commercial in the late ’70s advertising a bargain “greatest hits” collection by “the legendary Sam Cooke” and thinking, “Who?? How can he be legendary if I’ve never heard of him?”

When my friend Gary played his records one night in 1985, I fell in love with the songs and, especially, the voice. Sure, I’d heard “You Send Me” before, and I recognized “Twistin’ the Night Away” from its use in the “Animal House” film soundtrack. But I was kicking myself for not having fully appreciated this guy before. I picked up two outstanding CD compilations — the 28-song “The Man and His Music” (1986) and the grittier blues collection “The Rhythm and The Blues” (1995) — and found that the deeper I dove into his recorded catalog, the more I was dazzled by his expressive tenor and the way he could successfully handle such a wide range of genres.

He could wrap his voice around a time-honored gospel song like “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” and then pick up Nat King Cole’s mantle as a convincing crooner of standards like “Mona Lisa.” Cooke’s mastery of legendary blues tunes like “Nobody Loves You When You’re Down and Out” is every bit as impressive as his take on a pop confection like “Cupid.” These days, whenever a Cooke track comes up on somebody’s playlist, I stop what I’m doing and just marvel at that voice.

The Soul Stirrers, with Sam Cooke (bottom left)

Cooke began singing in Chicago at age six in the children’s choir of the Baptist church where his father was preacher. He started getting noticed when he became the lead singer with the gospel vocal group The Highway Q.C.s at the tender age of 14. He received wider exposure when, at 18, he took over R.H. Harris’s place as lead tenor in The Soul Stirrers, who were signed with Specialty Records, where they recorded such gospel standards as “Jesus Gave Me Water,” “Touch the Hem of His Garment” and “Peace In the Valley.”

While gospel was popular, Cooke recognized that its fans were mostly limited to rural communities, and he wanted to expand his reach by attempting other genres, notably pop and soul music. Where artists like Marvin Gaye faced heated opposition from his preacher father for abandoning religious music for secular music, Cooke was surprised and pleased that his father supported his son’s career move. Said Cooke, “My father told me it was not what I sang that was important, but that God gave me a voice and musical talent, and the true use of His gift was to share it and make people happy.”

He covered classics like George Gershwin’s “Summertime” and The Ink Spots standard “(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons,” but noting that the real money in the music business went to the composers who held the copyrights, Cooke began writing songs, and eventually, most of the hits he recorded and released were Cooke originals. He focused on singles and built a solid legacy on those charts, but he also enjoyed a couple of high-rated albums as well — 1963’s blues-oriented “Night Beat” (which reached #62) and 1964’s “Ain’t That Good News,” which included three hit singles and peaked at #34.

Cooke was also intensely interested in the growing civil rights movement in the early ’60s. He became friends with Martin Luther King and the more revolutionary Malcolm X, as well as sports giants Jim Brown and Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali). The award-winning stage play and film “One Night In Miami” offers a fictionalized account of the night Cooke, Brown and Malcolm X were all together to see Clay’s upset of heavyweight boxing champ Sonny Liston, and their meeting to discuss how they could help advance the civil rights cause.

Leslie Odom Jr. as Sam Cooke in the 2020 film “One Night in Miami”

In the film, the outspoken Malcolm accuses Cooke of disloyalty to the black community by pandering to white audiences, and Cooke calmly argues that his method produces greater economic empowerment for black artists. Malcolm harshly ridicules the music Cooke has produced since finding success, but Cooke insists his success and creative autonomy is itself an inspiration to the black community. He agrees with Malcolm that Bob Dylan’s then-new “Blowin’ in the Wind” showed that protest songs with thought-provoking lyrics could become popular on the charts, and points to his own profoundly relevant “A Change is Gonna Come” as indicative of the kind of songs he’d be writing in the future.

Sadly, that landmark track wasn’t released as a single until after his death, which ironically gave it even more impact in 1965 as the watershed Voting Rights Act was passed and the movement took center stage in communities across the country. In the 2017 documentary, it was pointed out that Barack Obama quoted from the song often during his 2008 Presidential campaign speeches, which helped revive Cooke’s name and reputation as an iconic cultural figure.

I’ve chosen not to devote too much space here to all the details and conjecture surrounding his shocking death. The documentary does a thorough job of that, and I’ve always preferred to write about the music and achievements of artists like Cooke rather than their ignoble demises. As his nephew said, “My uncle’s star shone very brightly for a short period of time. Some stars are tragic figures. Sam Cooke was not a tragic figure. He was a very good person who just had a tragic ending.”

Bill Gardner, the longtime radio host of the “Rhapsody in Black” program on KPFK-FM in Los Angeles, said, “Sam was never a violent guy. I never saw him get angry. Never saw him want to hit anybody. Hard for me to believe the story as it appears in the police report. In my opinion, everyone should be a suspect, but I don’t think we’ll ever get to the bottom of it.”

As a musical coda to Cooke’s story, the impactful singers Dion DiMucci and Paul Simon teamed up in 2020 to write and record the poignant “Song For Sam Cooke (Here in America),” with provocative lyrics that remind us that the struggle still goes on: “You were a star when you were standing on a stage, /I look back on it, I feel a burning rage, /You sang ‘You Send Me,’ I sang ‘I Wonder Why,’ /I still wonder, you were way too young to die, /Here in America…” I’ve included the track as the final entry on my Spotify playlist below.

It’s profoundly sad to acknowledge how we were all robbed of the chance to hear more from this wondrous singer, and to imagine what Sam Cooke might have accomplished in the ensuing decades.

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I’ve got my finger on the pulse

In Chicago in 1944, an 11-year-old boy had begun to hang out with a gang of troublemakers in his rough-and-tumble neighborhood. In the community rec center, they picked a lock and broke into the kitchen to sample lemon meringue pies, and the boy noticed a piano sitting on a small stage nearby.

“I went up there, paused, stared, and then ran my fingers across the keys for a moment,” the boy wrote in his memoirs decades later. “That’s when I began to find peace. I was 11. I knew this was it for me. Music was it. Forever.”

That young boy would go on to be nominated 85 times for Grammy Awards, winning 28. He collaborated with the broadest array of musicians you can imagine — Duke Ellington, Snoop Dogg, Lesley Gore, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, Donna Summer, Ella Fitzgerald, George Benson, and many dozens more.

That man was Quincy Jones, one of the most accomplished figures in the music business over the last seven decades. He died November 3 at age 91.

The incomparable Stevie Wonder said, “The most important thing Quincy taught me was, ‘Don’t stop until you know you got it like you want it, until it feels right, it feels good to you. Don’t settle for your vocals just being OK. Make sure that you give it all that you’ve got — not for the money of it, but for the art of it.’ You can look back and hear all of that when you hear the records he made.”

From the jazz records he made in the ’50s to the pop songs he produced in the ’60s, from the R&B LPs he cut in the ’70s, to the multiplatinum albums he produced for iconic stars of the ’80s, Jones showed an uncommon ability to understand and appreciate a wide variety of genres. As a producer, arranger, conductor, songwriter and instrumentalist, and later as a businessman and industry mogul, Jones made his indelible mark, influencing and mentoring many artists and protégés over his seven-decade career.

It might not have worked out that way. When he was just 7, Jones lost his mother to mental illness and institutionalization, and his father remarried and moved his family of eight children and step-children to Seattle. Jones was tempted by “the gangster life,” as he put it, but he was driven by an even stronger passion to create music. He learned trumpet and musical arranging, playing in marching bands and jazz combos alike. He earned a scholarship to Berklee School of Music in Boston but dropped out when jazz giant Lionel Hampton tapped him to join his touring band at only 20.

In New York, he worked with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra at CBS, where he played trumpet behind Elvis Presley’s first TV appearances on “Ed Sullivan.” Jones toured the world as trumpeter and musical arranger for Dizzy Gillespie’s band and also studied music composition and theory with world-renowned music teacher/composer Nadia Boulanger in Paris. “She taught me so much,” Jones said, “and gave me the best advice I ever got: ‘Quincy, your music will never be more nor less than you are as a human being.’ It made me realize the importance of treating people fairly and kindly, and to encourage people to be their best selves.”

Jones in the 1950s

In the late ’50s, he formed The Jones Boys, an 18-piece big band he led, who toured North America and Europe to enthusiastic audiences and rave reviews, but the earnings failed to cover costs, and the band was forced to dissolve. “We had the best jazz band on the planet,” Jones recalled, “and yet we were literally starving. That’s when I discovered that there was music, and there was the music business. If I was going to survive, I would have to learn the difference between the two.”

He began concentrating his efforts in recording studios, helping to produce, arrange and conduct orchestras for some of the biggest stars of the late ’50s and early ’60s — Dinah Washington, Billy Eckstine, Ray Charles, Peggy Lee. He produced all four of Lesley Gore’s million-selling singles (“It’s My Party,” “Judy’s Turn to Cry,” “She’s a Fool” and “You Don’t Own Me”).

For Frank Sinatra, Jones arranged and conducted on two of his most popular albums — “It Might As Well Be Swing” with Count Basie in 1964 (which included the award-winning “Fly Me to the Moon”), and his live LP “Sinatra at the Sands” in 1966. “He took me to a whole new planet,” said Jones. “Working successfully with Frank opened a lot of doors for me.”

Jones and Sinatra in the studio in 1964

But Jones had already opened a few doors through his own efforts in the front office at Mercury Records, where he rose to be vice-president, the first African-American to do so at a major label. By the mid-’70s, in a partnership with Time Warner, he created Quincy Jones Entertainment, which included the pop-culture magazine Vibe and Qwest Broadcasting. He later sold it the 1990s for $250 million.

He also showed a talent for composing and producing film scores, beginning with 1964’s “The Pawnbroker.” He wrote more than three dozen, including “Walk, Don’t Run,” “In Cold Blood,” “Cactus Flower,” “$ (Dollars)” and “The Getaway.” Most notably, he scored the Oscar-winning “In the Heat of the Night” in 1967, with Ray Charles singing the title song. “I loved scoring films,” he once said. “It’s a multifaceted process, an abstract combination of science and soul.”

For a few years in the early ’70s, he recorded several solo albums that fared well on both pop and R&B charts, especially “Walking in Space” (1969), “You’ve Got It Bad Girl” (1973), “Body Heat” (1974), “Mellow Madness” (1975), “Sounds…and Stuff Like That! (1978) and “The Dude” (1981). He also wrote the theme music to such top TV series as “Sanford and Son” and “Ironside” and the first episode of the groundbreaking “Roots” miniseries. During that same period, he worked on successful album projects with Aretha Franklin, The Brothers Johnson, Rufus with Chaka Khan, Donny Hathaway and Billy Preston.

His most famous collaboration came when he supervised the adaptation of the Broadway score for the 1978 film “The Wiz,” where he met Michael Jackson. They hit it off immediately, and Jackson insisted on Jones as producer of what would become his landmark solo album, 1979’s “Off the Wall.” Jones remembered Jackson having very strong opinions about how the tracks should be recorded, and they sometimes disagreed. “I recall Michael thought we needed to get rid of the strings during the intro to ‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough.’ I said, ‘No, Michael, those will be like a siren calling everyone to the dance floor.’ Sure enough, I was right about that one.”

Jackson and Jones with their multiple “Thriller” Grammys in 1984

Their studio chemistry peaked three years later when they recorded 30 tracks and then selected the best nine to comprise the universally appealing “Thriller,” widely regarded as the biggest selling album of all time. It held the #1 slot for nearly 40 weeks in 1983-84, and Jackson credited Jones with pushing him to reach further, higher, deeper. “He’d make you do a thing until it’s perfect,” Jackson said in 1985. “He’d say, ‘It’s beautiful, Michael. We have a take!… Now, can you give us one more?'” It was also Jones who came up with the idea to bring in Eddie Van Halen to record the electrifying guitar solo on “Beat It” and Vincent Price to handle the spooky narration that closes “Thriller.”

Jones went on to produce Jackson’s third multiplatinum album, 1987’s “Bad,” with its five chart-topping singles, and he also shared his studio talents with Donna Summer, producing her 1982 LP and co-writing its hit “Love is in Control (Finger on the Trigger),” and George Benson’s “Give Me the Night” album in 1980.

Jones (second from left) with Lionel Richie, Daryl Hall, Stevie Wonder and Paul Simon in 1985

Some have called his leadership role as producer of the extraordinary “We Are the World” recording session in early 1985 as his crowning achievement. Lionel Richie, who co-wrote the song and helped shepherd the project, said he assumed they would bring in the numerous stars one by one to sing their parts and then put it all together afterwards, but Jones said, “No way, man. We’ll be here for three weeks. We’re going to bring them all together, put ’em in a circle with all the mics, and everyone will sing it looking at each other.” It seemed daunting, but Jones managed to control the concentration of major celebrities by famously posting a sign at the studio entrance: “Check your egos at the door.” Said Richie, “Quincy had everyone’s complete respect and attention, so it worked. He got everyone to cooperate. It was incredible. He was a master orchestrator, not only of music but of personalities.”

Jones still wasn’t done. In 1991, he won the Album of the Year Grammy for his LP “Back on the Block,” which brought together more than a dozen major stars from three generations, including Miles Davis, Sarah Vaughan, Dionne Warwick, Luther Vandross, Ice-T, Barry White, Al Jarreau and Ray Charles. The album topped R&B charts and spawned multiple singles like “I’ll Be Good to You” and “The Secret Garden.”

Wonder and Jones

He followed that up with “Q’s Jook Joint” in 1995, another star-studded affair he produced that topped jazz charts and merged musical styles. Stevie Wonder said, “There was one track where he had Ray Charles, Bono and me doing ‘Let the Good Times Roll.’ The three of us weren’t in the room together, we did our parts separately, but Quincy put it together like we were there at the same time. It’s kind of like making a movie. You have to make it feel like it was right there and then. And he was able to do that, put the pieces together and come up with a great track.”

Jones said at the time, “Music transcends time, and it bridges generations. Bebop and hip-hop, in so many ways, they’re connected. A lot of rappers remind me so much of bebop guys in terms of improvisation, beats and rhymes.”

In a sort of “full circle” symmetry, one of Jones’s early recorded pieces, “Soul Bossa Nova” (1962), was prominently featured in the 1997 box-office smash “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery.”

He was married three times, most famously to actress Peggy Lipton (1974-1990), and had seven children. His daughter Rashida, an actress who starred on the “Parks and Recreation” TV series, described her father as “a genius, a giant, an icon, a culture shifter.”

In a 2018 TV interview, Jones was asked how he “worked his magic” in the studio. “I listen to the orchestra like an x-ray machine,” he noted. “I’ve been around it all my life. If it’s too thick, too thin, too slow, too fast, wrong key, whatever, I can just tell. And we do another take and modify it accordingly. I don’t go by surveys or focus groups. I go by my goosebumps. If it gives me goosebumps, it’s right.”

“If an album doesn’t do well, some people will say, ‘it was the producer’s fault,'” Jones said, “but if’s that’s true, then if it does well, it should be his ‘fault,’ too. The tracks don’t just all of a sudden appear. The producer has to have the skill, experience and ability to guide the vision to completion.”

When asked for any words of wisdom, Jones talked about the need to remove negativity from his life. “Holding grudges, allowing anger in, it’s all a big waste of time. Some words from Mark Twain still overwhelm me: ‘Anger is an acid that does more harm to the vessel in which it’s stored than to anything on which it’s poured.‘ Isn’t it amazing it took me until I was 85 to figure that out?”

Rest in peace, Quincy Jones. You’ve brought positive vibes to music lovers everywhere, and you’ll be sorely missed.

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The Spotify playlist below provides a cross section of material Quincy Jones has written, produced, arranged and conducted and/or performed on during his half-century in the business.