Sam Moore, half of β60s R&B duo Sam & Dave, dies at 89
Sam Moore, who as half of the 1960s R&B duo Sam & Dave sang gritty but hook-filled hits including βSoul Manβ and βHold On, Iβm Coming,β died Friday in Coral Gables, Fla. He was 89.
His death was confirmed by his publicist, Jeremy Westby, who said the cause was complications from an unspecified surgery. Dave Prater, Mooreβs partner in Sam & Dave, died in a car accident at age 50 in 1988.
With Moore as the tenor and Prater as the baritone, Sam & Dave were one of the signature acts at Memphisβ Stax Records, which offered a tougher, sweatier alternative to the more polished R&B sound that Detroitβs Motown had turned into pop gold.

Yet Sam & Dave were no strangers to the charts: In 1965, they kicked off a four-year run in which they reached the top 40 of Billboardβs R&B chart a dozen times and hit No. 2 on the all-genre Hot 100 with βSoul Man,β which was written and produced by Isaac Hayes and David Porter and featured backing by Staxβs crackerjack house band, Booker T. & the M.G.βs. βSoul Manβ won a Grammy Award in 1968, beating Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrellβs βAinβt No Mountain High Enoughβ and Smokey Robinson and the Miraclesβ βI Second That Emotionβ to be named best R&B performance by a duo or group with vocals.
Among Sam & Daveβs other hits were βI Thank You,β βYou Donβt Know Like I Know,β βSaid I Wasnβt Gonna Tell Nobody,β βSomething Is Wrong with My Babyβ and βYou Got Me Humminβ,β which a teenage Billy Joel went on to cover with his group the Hassles.
βMost bands β¦ could get away with doing a lousy version of a Sam & Dave record and still get an incredible reaction to it,β Joel said when he inducted the duo into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1992. βBut they all suffer when you compare them to the original.β
For all they accomplished in the studio, Sam & Dave were perhaps most highly regarded as an explosive live act, one known as both Double Dynamite and the Sultans of Sweat.
Samuel David Moore was born in Miami on Oct. 12, 1935, and grew up singing in the church. He met Prater at Miamiβs King of Hearts nightclub in the early β60s when Prater performed at an amateur night that Moore was hosting. The two formed Sam & Dave and toiled mostly in obscurity until Ahmet Ertegun, Jerry Wexler and Tom Dowd β the creative braintrust behind Atlantic Records β caught their show and signed the duo to a deal that had them recording for Stax, which Atlantic was distributing.
Moore and Prater, whose relationship was always more professional than friendly, broke up in 1970 but reunited after each manβs solo career fizzled. In 1978, the Blues Brothers β comedians John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd β released a cover of βSoul Manβ that went to No. 14 on the Hot 100; the renewed attention propelled Sam & Dave for a few more years until they played their final gig together in San Francisco on New Yearβs Eve in 1981. (To Mooreβs chagrin, Prater later toured as Sam & Dave with a different singer, Sam Daniels.)
In 1982, Moore married Joyce McRae, who also began managing his career and helped him overcome an addiction to heroin. He went on to sing on albums by Don Henley and Bruce Springsteen and received a lifetime achievement award from the Recording Academy in 2019. Mooreβs survivors include his wife, their daughter and two grandchildren.