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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=91TT2793>
<title>
Dec. 16, 1991: Off on a Cashmere Cloud
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MUSIC, Page 78
Off on a Cashmere Cloud
</hdr><body>
<p>Before he was a pop star Nat King Cole was a jazz artist, and a
big new boxed set shows how good he really was
</p>
<p>By Jay Cocks
</p>
<p> Even though this is a state occasion, let us, for the
present, forswear all the obligatory cries of acclamation. None
of this "the king lives!" stuff. And no "once and future king"
either. They may be true, but they sound a little stiff somehow,
something his music never was. So--taking a cue from the music
itself--let's just salute the memory of Nat King Cole with one
bright "flash!," a loud "bam!" and a reverent but resounding
"alakazam!"
</p>
<p> You may recognize that little refrain from a 1950 killer
hit of Cole's called Orange Colored Sky. If not, it isn't too
late to catch up and catch on. In fact, now is just the time.
Cole is more emphatically present now than at any time since
his death in 1965. His daughter Natalie reprised his
Unforgettable earlier this year, laid in her dad's voice for a
posthumous duet and grabbed herself a No. 1 album. A new Cole
biography was published this spring. Every time PBS has a time
slot to fill or needs to kick off a fund raiser, it seems to air
a show from Cole's '50s TV variety series.
</p>
<p> And most important (flash! bam!), the intrepid Mosaic
Records has just released The Complete Capitol Recordings of The
Nat King Cole Trio: 18 CDs or 27 LPs, with a total of 349 cuts
and about 17 hours of music. Great American music comes in lots
of styles, but whatever the sound, it doesn't get much greater
than this. Any one of the tunes in this collection can swing you
off on a cashmere cloud.
</p>
<p> Yes, Cole was that good. He could sing up there with
Sinatra, Billy Eckstine, Tony Bennett; "one of our four or five
most awe-inspiring and most popular mainstream vocalists" is
the way Will Friedwald sums it up in his kinetic and
knowledgeable essays accompanying the set. Along with that
considerable distinction, Cole was also a superb keyboard man,
mightily influenced by the great Earl Hines and able to hold his
own against--if not precisely surpass--his mentor and the
likes of Art Tatum. When he became a pop superstar, he gradually
shed the bass and guitar that had been the foundation of his
trio sound. But he never lost his jazz roots.
</p>
<p> Well, almost never. Hit tunes from late in his career like
Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days of Summer and Ramblin' Rose stretched
his credentials pretty thin and are nowhere to be found on
Mosaic. Neither are such excellent songs as Mona Lisa, a 1950
smash that was also the first Cole side to have no trio
inflection whatsoever. The Mosaic set is for jazz fans, not
nostalgists, and at $270 it is not an impulse purchase. (It is
available only by mail or phone order from Mosaic:
203-327-7111.)
</p>
<p> Producer Michael Cuscuna tried to include only tunes
"where Nat is on piano, the trio style is evident and hopefully
there is some jazz content." Even such a flexible standard
becomes a little restrictive by the early '50s, when Cole turned
more and more toward often wonderfully arranged orchestrations
by Nelson Riddle, Billy May, Pete Rugolo and others. One of the
Mosaic set's standout cuts is Cole's benchmark version,
arranged by Rugolo, of Billy Strayhorn's great ballad of
fantasy, loneliness and longing, Lush Life. There is also Nature
Boy--no getting away from that--and such toothsome novelties
as four duets with Johnny Mercer, including the memorably titled
Save the Bones for Henry Jones ('Cause Henry Don't Eat No Meat).
</p>
<p> Mercer, a cool-hand songwriter as well as a canny
businessman, had first seen Cole playing a date at a Los Angeles
steak joint in the late '30s and almost a half-decade later,
signed him up for his fledgling Capitol Records. Cole was, even
then, a sure jazz spirit and a first-rate singer. Born Nathaniel
Adams Coles in Montgomery, Ala., in 1919, he had moved with his
clergyman father and family to Chicago in 1923 and started to
play professionally while he was still a teenager. Guitarist
Oscar Moore and bass player Wesley Prince joined him in 1937--a club owner had suggested to Cole that he form a trio--and
"for seven years," as the front man himself later remembered,
"we knocked ourselves out." Cole had begun to sing, he later
recalled, "to break the monotony," and by the time they joined
Mercer's new label the trio had gone about as far in jazz and
show biz as a black outfit could in those days.
</p>
<p> It was the driving, airy invention of the trio sound,
first defined by such pre-Capitol hits as Sweet Lorraine, that
staked their reputation. But it was Cole's singing that made
them a stellar attraction. "The vocals," Cole said simply,
"caught on." There were several shifts in trio personnel over
the years (Irving Ashby, for example, took over the guitar when
Moore departed in 1947), and the group became a quartet in 1949
with the addition of drummer Joe Costanzo. But through it all,
Cole was the guiding spirit and main draw.
</p>
<p> This helped him get his TV show in 1956--he was the
first major black entertainer to have a regular network program--but didn't do a whole lot for him in the jazz community,
which had been buffeted by bop and the restless experimentation
of Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane. Cole began
to look like a silken technician who'd sold his soul. One of
the best things about this Mosaic set is that it helps to
correct that impression and shows Cole for the artist he was.
He wasn't corrupted by the mainstream. He used jazz to enrich
and renew it, and left behind a lasting legacy. Very like a
king.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>