Nat 'King' Cole - Where Did Everyone Go (2LP, 45RPM) - AudioSoundMusic
Nat 'King' Cole - Where Did Everyone Go (2LP, 45RPM) - AudioSoundMusic
Nat 'King' Cole - Where Did Everyone Go (2LP, 45RPM) - AudioSoundMusic
Nat 'King' Cole - Where Did Everyone Go (2LP, 45RPM) - AudioSoundMusic

Nat 'King' Cole - Where Did Everyone Go (2LP, 45RPM)

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Nat King Cole – vocal [click here to see more vinyl featuring Nat King Cole]

Gordon Jenkins – arranger, conductor

Gordon Jenkins And His Orchestra : Armand Kaproff, Arnold Koblentz, Bernie Leighton, Beverly Jenkins, Bill Schaeffer, Bobby Hackett, Bunny Shawker, Charles Griffard, Conrad Gozzo, Dan Lube, David Frisina, David Sterkin, Dick Cathcart, Gordon Jenkins, Israel Baker, Jack Chaney, Jack Lesberg, Jacques Gasselin, John Cave, Joseph Livoti, Joseph Quadri, Kathryn Thompson, Kurt Reher, Lou Raderman, Louis Kievman, Marshall Sosson, Matty Matlock, Meyer "Mike" Rubin, Milt Yaner, Mischa Russell, Moe Schneider, Murray Kellner, Nick Fatool, Paul Robyn, Paul Shure, Raphael Kramer, Richard Marino, Richard Perissi, Stan Wrightsman, Tony Mottola, Uan Rasey, Victor Arno, Vincent DeRosa, Walter Edelstein, Wayne Songer, Wilbur Schwartz

 

2 LP, standard sleeve, Six-panel booklet with rare photos and essays from Chris Hall and Michael Fremer

Original analog Master tape : YES

Heavy Press : 180g

Record color : black

Speed : 45 RPM

Size : 12'’

Stereo

Studio

Record Press : unspecified

Label : Analogue Productions

Original Label : Capitol Records

Recorded August 13–14, 1962 at Capitol Studios, Hollywood

Produced by Lee Gillette

Remastered by Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman at AcousTech Mastering

Originally released in 1963

Reissued in 2010

 

Tracks:

Side A :

  1. Where Did Everyone Go?
  2. Say It Isn't So
  3. If Love Ain't There

Side B:

  1. (Ah, The Apple Trees) When The World Was Young
  2. Am I Blue?
  3. Someone To Tell It To

Side C:

  1. The End Of A Love Affair
  2. I Keep Goin' Back To Joe's
  3. Laughing On The Outside (Crying On The Inside)
  4. No, I Don't Want Her

Side D:

  1. Spring Is Here
  2. That's All There Is
  3. Farewell To Arms
  4. Happy New Year

 

Reviews:

“Compared to the reverb-drenched, watery and distant sounding original stereo records, Hoffman and Gray introduce just a “kiss” of echo chamber and no more. Enough to pleasantly wet down the aural landscape (much like they always wet the visual one before shooting an automobile commercial), but not so much that it splashes in your face. The result is a thrillingly intimate and honest sonic window that still maintains a respectful distance between listener and performer. These Nat “King” Cole reissues are magical time machines that will transport you back to Capitol Studios in ways the distant, compressed and obscured by reverb original stereo editions do not.” Michael Fremer

"[P]erfect sound quality, breathtaking arrangements, tasteful material and that voice. Aaah! That voice! It delivered so much, and was so inimitable that Cole could use it to make any song his own... Cole creates the necessary mood with such completeness that you feel an ache in nearly every note." - Ken Kessler, Hi-Fi News

“This is the third and final collection to feature the team of Nat King Cole and Gordon Jenkins (arranger). Their earlier collaborations yielded the uniformly superior chart-topper Love Is the Thing (1957) and follow-up The Very Thought of You (1958). As the moniker suggests, there is a perceptible poignancy and longing weaved throughout Jenkins' arrangements. The opener "Where Did Everyone Go?" possesses a solitude accentuated by responsive instrumentation that supports, yet never intrudes. Cole's practically conversational delivery of pop standards -- such as Irving Berlin's "Say It Isn't So" or Johnny Mercer's "When the World Was Young" -- become musical soliloquies with the score as a sonic subtext. His rich and cozy baritone carries the ache of "Am I Blue?" and the slinky "I Keep Goin' Back to Joe's" into an understated, almost plaintive blues. Here he perfectly demonstrates a boundless capacity as a melodic interpreter of song. "No, I Don't Want Her" finds Cole's voice gilded with an intimacy that virtually takes the listener into the singer's confidence. As he had done on his previous outings with Cole, Jenkins supplies one selection. Suitably "That's All There Is, There Isn't Any More" is the last track on the album and certainly provides a lovely contrast to Judy Garland's arguably more familiar reading.” AllMusic Review by Lindsay Planer

 

Ratings :

AllMusic : 3 / 5 , Discogs : 4,23 / 5, HiFi News : Quality = 95% out of 100%

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