Nat King Cole crowns a very short list of the most identifiable and memorable voices in American music. This ground breaking American icon's impact continues to cross the world's cultural and political boundaries. The story of his life is a study in success in the face of adversity and the triumph of talent over the ignorance of prejudice.Born Nathaniel Adams Coles on March 17, 1919 (although 1916 and 1917 have also been cited), in Montgomery, Alabama, Cole was born into a family with a pivotal position in the black community; his father was pastor of the First Baptist Church. In 1921, the family migrated to Chicago, part of the mass exodus seeking a better life in the prospering industrial towns of the north. At four years old, he was learning the piano by ear from his mother, a choir director in the church. At 12 years old he took lessons in classical piano, but was soon to be bitten by the Jazz bug -- inescapable in Chicago. He left school at 15 to pursue a career as a jazz pianist. Cole's first professional break came touring in the revival of the show "Shuffle Along." When the show folded he was stranded in Los Angeles. Cole looked for club work and found it at the Century Club on Santa Monica Boulevard, where he made quite an impression with the "in" crowd.
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During the 1950s, he was urged to make films, but his appearances were few and far between, including character parts in BLUE GARDENIA, CHINA GATE, and ST. LOUIS BLUES. However, Cole was not a natural actor -- his enormous appeal lay in concerts and records.
During the years of Cole's enormous popularity in the "easy listening" field he said he felt that he was "just adjusting to the market: as soon as you start to make money in the popular field, they scream about how good you were in the old days, and what a bum you are now." At this time jazz fans had to turn out to see him in the clubs to hear his phenomenal piano -- an extension of the Earl Hines style that had many features of the new, hip sounds of bebop. If Cole had not had such an effecting singing voice he might well have been one of bebop's leaders. Bebop was an expression of black pride, but, it should be noted, so was Cole's career, proving that whites did not possess the monopoly on sophistication.
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| Nat King Cole at the piano. |
Nat Cole's "unforgettable" voice, with its honeyed velvet tones in a rich, easy drawl, is one of the great moments in music, and saw him accepted in a "white" world. With high profile friends, such as Frank Sinatra, his position entailed compromises that gained him the hostility of civil rights activists in the early 1960s. But Cole was a brave figure in a period when racial prejudice was at its most demeaning, Cole suffered the indignity of being "whited up" for some of his TV performances, to make him more "accessible" to a white audience. Before his death from lung cancer in 1965, Cole was planning a production of James Baldwin's play, "Amen Corner," displaying an interest in radical black literature at odds with his image as a sugary balladeer.




