Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go? (CD) ~ Nat "King... Cover Art

Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go? (CD)

By: Nat "King" Cole (Artist)


List Price: $17.98
Tower Price: $14.67
You Save: $3.31 (19%)
Add to BagAdd to Bag Click to go directly to the checkout.
This item qualifies for FREE Shop N' Save Shipping for orders over $25. Check individual shipping price. *Some Restrictions Apply.
Availability: In Stock
Share This:
Add To KaboodleAdd To Kaboodle  Submit To Digg!Submit To Digg!  Share On FacebookShare On Facebook  Add to FavoritesAdd to Favorites  TwitterTwitter 

Product Description


Track Listing

Your browser doesn't seem to have Flash enabled.
In order to access the album preview center, please ensure that the Flash player is installed. You can download it here.

DISC 1 for Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go? (CD) Album By Nat "King" Cole (Artist)
1   When I Fall In Love
2   Stardust
3   Stay As Sweet As You Are
4   Where Can I Go Without You?
5   Maybe It's Because I Love You Too Much
6   Love Letters
7   Ain't Misbehavin'
8   I Thought About Marie
9   At Last
10   It's All In the Game
11   When Sunny Gets Blue
12   Love Is the Thing
13   Where Did Everyone Go?
14   Say It Isn't So
15   If Love Ain't There
16   When the World Was Young
17   Am I Blue?
18   Someone To Tell It To
19   End Of a Love Affair, The
20   I Keep Goin' Back To Joe's
21   Laughing On the Outside (Crying On the Inside)
22   No, I Don't Want Her
23   Spring Is Here
24   That's All There Is, There Isn't Any More
 

Run a Quick Search on "Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go?" by Nat "King" Cole to Browse Related Products:

Browse more products related to "Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go?"

Browse more products related to "Nat "King" Cole"


Title Note

Liner Note Author: James Ritz.

Arranger: Gordon Jenkins.

One of the more outstanding of mail-order firm Collectors' Choice Music's series of two-fer CD reissues of Nat King Cole LPs, Love Is the Thing/Where Did Everyone Go? combines the contents of two of the four LPs Cole recorded with arranger/conductor Gordon Jenkins. The first, Love Is the Thing, came in December 1956 and was released in March 1957, after which it went on to top the Billboard chart for eight weeks and, eventually, sell over a million copies. It was also one of Cole's best albums. He and Jenkins chose 12 love songs, including several standards dating back to the '20s, such as Hoagy Carmichael's "Stardust" and Fats Waller's "Ain't Misbehavin'." They borrowed songs associated with female stars Doris Day ("When I Fall in Love"), Peggy Lee ("Where Can I Go Without You?"), and Ethel Waters ("Love Is the Thing"), meanwhile showing particular interest in the melodies of soundtrack composer Victor Young ("When I Fall in Love," "Where Can I Go Without You?," "Love Letters"). Those were particularly felicitous associations, because Jenkins' inventive, unhurried string charts were suggestive of soundtrack music, and Cole's restrained vocal approach, with its careful articulation and calm phrasing, made for a more considered performance than the real feeling in the lyrics. Together, Cole and Jenkins created a highly stylized romantic effect not unlike that found in Hollywood movies of the period. After doing two more albums in 1958, The Very Thought of You (more love songs) and Everytime I Feel the Spirit (spirituals), Cole and Jenkins got back together one last time in August 1962 for Where Did Everyone Go? (released in May 1963). This time, the selections were "songs of love and loneliness," as a sleeve note put it; the LP was Cole's version of the kind of saloon-song concept album Frank Sinatra had made with Jenkins (e.g., No One Cares). Once again, songs were borrowed from female singers, this time Lee ("When the World Was Young"), Waters ("Am I Blue?"), and Mabel Mercer ("The End of a Love Affair"). And, even more than before, the arranger/conductor and the singer deliberately worked against the prevailing romantic emotions, in this case negative ones. They might choose a saloon song like "Where Did Everyone Go?," but Cole never sounded angry, or like he was drowning his sorrows in booze, as Sinatra could on similar material. In fact, he made a point of singing the introductory verse, which established that the singer was actually repeating what he had heard some other lonely drinker say, not his own story. And Jenkins continued to support the singer's framing of the story with lovely string parts that kept suggesting the feelings involved, but never going overboard. Both performers thus used their talents to glamorize and objectify the emotions the songs meant to represent, turning them into art. ~ William Ruhlmann



Customer Reviews for "Love Is The Thing / Where Did Everyone Go? (CD)" by Nat "King" Cole (Artist)

There are no customer reviews yet. Be the first to write a review!

Submit your Review




Explore More Great Tower Sales & Specials



Tower Records music Sales, Promotions & Special Features

Today's Most Popular Music Genres

Tower.com Music Boutique Stores

  • Greatest Hits Boutique
    Expand your musical horizons with our monthly selections for "Greatest Hits" and "Best Of" CD Collections.
  • Tower Records Vinyl Store
    Enjoy some of our favorite new pressings, indie rock releases, and milk crate essentials priced at up to 30% off so you can keep spinning right round (Like a record!)
  • The Beatles Collector's Boutique
    On 09-09-09, experience music history when the original studio albums by The Beatles are re-released, digitally remastered for the first time! Browse our favorite Beatles music, video and book titles!
  • Woodstock Anniversary Boutique
    Celebrating 40 years of Woodstock - Three days of music that changed the world forever!
  • The History Of Indie Rock Boutique
    Browse Our Album Art History of Indie Rock Influencers, from the 1960s to today!

Interact with Tower.com