For each of the past three days, I listened to a disc of a three-CD compilation of Sam Cooke titled You Send Me. I found some interesting things in two of the songs.
"You Send Me" has some interesting articulation. The "in-" in "infatuation" is stressed instead of the "fa," but I think that's just to make the meter of the line work. In the same part, the "so" in the line "But, ooh, it’s lasted so long" is drawn out to three syllables, to sort of show how long it's lasted. And when Cooke sings "marry you," the rest of the instrumentation drops out so that he sings the line almost a cappella, which could represent the seriousness or finality of marriage.
I also found some interesting stuff in his version of Gershwin's "Summertime." Apparently Cooke recorded more than one version; "Summertime" is included on an-other Sam Cooke compilation album I have, but it's a different recording (the You Send Me set also contains a different take of "Win Your Love for Me," which is distinct in that there are no backing vocals and the bass is more prominent in the mix). In any case, in the version of "Summertime" in the You Send Me set, Cooke takes some of the phrases from the first two verses and combines them in some phrases that he sticks between the second and third verses. He takes "don't cry" from the end of the first verse and combines it with "they're standin' by" from the end of the second to get:
They’re standin’ by so don’t cry They’re standin’ by; don’t cry
Not only does it tie the song together by strengthening the connection between those two verses, but it also points out the rhyme scheme used in the song.











