Natalie Cole Unforgettable With Love 1991 Elektrarar (2025)
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The album was guided by heavyweight producers including David Foster , Tommy LiPuma, and Natalie's then-husband André Fischer.
: A complex, sophisticated jazz standard handled with immense technical skill. Commercial and Critical Reception natalie cole unforgettable with love 1991 elektrarar
For years, Natalie Cole resisted the immense pressure to record the songs of her father, a titan of 20th-century music who died of lung cancer in 1965 when she was just 15. As she wrote in her memoir, she “never wanted to sing like him, sound like him, or do his music”. After forging her own path in the 1970s with R&B hits like “This Will Be,” and later battling a well-publicized drug addiction, Cole was looking for a new creative direction by the early 1990s.
Natalie Cole 's , released on June 11, 1991 , by Elektra Records , stands as a landmark "virtual reunion" and a career-defining tribute to her father, jazz legend Nat King Cole . A Technical and Emotional Milestone Would you like a full tracklist, Grammy details,
So next time you see a used copy of Natalie Cole’s masterpiece, don’t just look at the cover. Flip it over. Read the fine print. You just might be holding the elusive "Elektrarar"—a beautiful mistake in an otherwise perfect album.
: The album's centerpiece is the title track, " Unforgettable ," which features a "virtual duet" between Natalie and her father by electronically mixing his original 1951 recording with her new vocals. Commercial and Critical Reception For years, Natalie Cole
: Certified 7x Platinum by the RIAA, selling over seven million copies in the U.S. alone. Track Highlights
Using modern studio technology, engineers isolated Nat King Cole’s original 1961 vocal track. Natalie then recorded a new vocal arrangement to accompany her father. The result was spine-tingling. It wasn't just a duet; it felt like a conversation across time. When the two voices harmonized in the chorus, the emotional weight was palpable, creating a sense of closure and connection between a daughter and the father she lost too soon.
. It is most famous for its closing track, "Unforgettable," which used then-revolutionary technology to create a "virtual duet" between Natalie and her late father. This recording helped Natalie embrace her family legacy and solidified her reputation as a sophisticated jazz-pop vocalist. Awards & Commercial Success
