Barnes & Noble
Although Natalie Cole had been a highly successful pop/R & B singer, Unforgettable launched her on a new career as a standards singer. Here Cole pays homage to her father, legendary singer Nat "King" Cole, by performing many of his classic hits. The result is a glorious tribute to an unparalleled artist, performed with skill and obvious
affection. Cole charms with bouncy numbers such as "Orange Colored Sky," "L-O-V-E," and "Paper Moon," and dazzles with poignant ballads such as "Mona Lisa." And she tugs the heartstrings with the title track, a "duet" with her father that was, of course, created technologically. Well worth all the accolades --Unforgettable earned six Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year -- this labor of love preserves the integrity of these incomparable songs while introducing them to a new generation of music lovers. Lucy Tauss
All Music Guide
A major change of direction for Natalie Cole, Unforgettable found the singer abandoning the type of R&B/pop she'd been recording since 1975 in favor of jazz-influenced pre-rock pop along the lines of Nat King Cole's music. It was a surprising risk that paid off handsomely -- both commercially and artistically. Naysayers who thought that so radical a change would be commercial suicide were proven wrong when the outstanding Unforgettable sold a shocking five million units. Quite clearly, this was an album Cole was dying to make. Paying tribute to her late father on "Mona Lisa," "Nature Boy," "Route 66," and other gems that had been major hits for him in the 1940s and early '50s, the 41-year-old Cole sounds more inspired than she had in well over a decade. On the title song, overdubbing was used to make it sound as though she were singing a duet with her father -- dishonest perhaps, but certainly enjoyable. Thankfully, standards and pre-rock pop turned out to be a primary direction for Cole, who was a baby when the title song became a hit for her father in 1951. Alex Henderson