Sam Cooke 200g 45 RPM! - Night Beat Audiophile Vinyl Double LP

Sold Date: August 3, 2017
Start Date: July 27, 2017
Final Price: $23.50 (USD)
Bid Count: 15
Seller Feedback: 74
Buyer Feedback: 7


Sam Cooke Night Beat Audiophile 200g 45 RPM Vinyl Double LP! A high-quality pressing of one of the "1000 albums to hear before you die!"
NOTE: Will combine shipping on LPs -- see what else I have for sale! $4.00 flat fee for up to 3 LPs, and $0.75 for each additional LP.
Condition: Record: NM - only played 4-5 times (I am the original owner) Sleeve: NM Extras: double record, 45 RPM, 200g
This is an amazing pressing of an amazing singer and an amazing album! These are very hefty 200g thick records, making them more durable allowing deeper/more resonant grooves to be cut. Also, being 45 RPM LPs (most LPs are 33 RPM), this is a little bit like having a higher sample rate on a CD or lower compression on an MP3. For same the same second of sound, a 45 RPM record covers more ground than a 33 RPM. Nevermind the technical details, the point is that this pressing sounds really great, deeper basses, richer sound, you can hear all the details of the classic performance.

Night Beat is the twelfth  by  , , and   and  .  by , the album was released in August 1963 in the United States by .

Night Beat originated from late-night recording sessions by Cooke and a quartet of studio musicians in February 1963. It has been featured in "best-of" lists by contemporary music critics and regarded as one of Cooke's best.


According to John Bush of , "Saddled with soaring strings and vocal choruses for maximum crossover potential, Sam Cooke's solo material often masked the most important part of his genius—his glorious voice—so the odd small-group date earns a special recommendation in his discography". He speculated that had Cooke not died prematurely, "there would've been several more sessions like this, but Night Beat is an even richer treasure for its rarity." Al Kooper of  wrote: "This is intimate Sam Cooke and his favorite musicians having some genuine fun in the studio, with obviously no eye toward ramming up the pop charts ... Each song is like another moody painting always in the appropriate, tasteful frame."

 included it on their 2007 list of "1000 Albums to Hear Before You Die", writing: "[Cooke] brought a spiritual intensity to every cute mainstream confection he recorded, but his beautiful voice was never more mesmerizing than on this hushed and gracious final album."


Cooke and his musicians — pianist Ray Johnson, organist  (who was only 16 at the time of recording), lead guitarist Barney Kessell, alternating drummers  and Ed Hall, bassist Cliff Hils and Clif White, and  on rhythm guitar — cut Night Beat in three days during late-night recording sessions at RCA Victor Studios in  in February 1963. "I Lost Everything", "Get Yourself Another Fool" and "Trouble Blues" were laid down on February 22, with the group returning, sans Kessell, the following day to record "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen", "Mean Old World", "Little Red Rooster" and "Laughin' and Clownin'". The last recording session for Night Beat took place on February 25, when the same group, sans Hall and Kessell, reunited to commit "Lost and Lookin'", "Please Don't Drive Me Away", "You Gotta Move", "Fool's Paradise" and "Shake Rattle and Roll" to tape.


Track listing[]

All songs conducted by 

Side oneNo.TitleWriter(s)Length1.""Traditional; arranged by Sam Cooke3:222."Lost and Lookin'", Lowell Jordan2:093.""Cooke3:444."Please Don't Drive Me Away"Charles Brown, Jesse Ervin2:125."I Lost Everything"Ella Tate3:196."Get Yourself Another Fool"Ernest Monroe Tucker, Frank A. Haywood 4:00Side twoNo.TitleWriter(s)Length1.""2:502."Laughin' and Clownin'"Cooke3:343."Trouble Blues"Charles Brown3:184.""Cooke2:355."Fool's Paradise"Johnny Fuller, Robert Geddins, David Avid2:326.""3:22

(from Wikipedia)