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Love Is the Thing (And More)

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Download links and information about Love Is the Thing (And More) by Nat King Cole. This album was released in 1957 and it belongs to Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 30:40 minutes.

Artist: Nat King Cole
Release date: 1957
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop
Tracks: 10
Duration: 30:40
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on Amazon $4.35
Buy on Songswave €1.56

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Stardust (featuring Nat *) 3:15
2. It's All In the Game (featuring Nat *) 3:07
3. When I Fall In Love (featuring Nat *) 3:10
4. Ain't Misbehavin' (featuring Nat *) 3:16
5. When Sunny Gets Blue (featuring Nat *) 2:46
6. Love Is the Thing (featuring Nat *) 3:04
7. At Last (featuring Nat *) 2:59
8. Stay As Sweet As You Are (featuring Nat *) 2:59
9. I Thought About Marie (featuring Nat *) 3:06
10. Where Can I Go Without You? (featuring Nat *) 2:58

Details

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Nat King Cole's collaborations with Gordon Jenkins rank among the finest from either artist or arranger. Cole's first stereophonic long player, 1957's Love Is the Thing remains the epitome of the pair's undeniable compatibility, and it topped the album charts for eight weeks. The opener "When I Fall in Love" is considered by many to be nothing short of definitive; the restrained orchestration perfectly adapts to the singer's verdant vocals. Similarly, "Stardust" sparkles as a flawless musical alliance is formed with Cole's warm and inviting narrative weaving over Jenkins' intimate score. Simply stated, both songs are unmitigated masterworks — and we're only two cuts into the dozen-song LP. Another key to the project's success is Jenkins ability to reign in just enough instrumentation to support Cole's uniformly restrained leads. Examples abound throughout, with "Stay as Sweet as You Are," "At Last," and the rural sophistication of "When Sunny Gets Blue." The heartfelt "Love Letters" and even the comparatively light "Ain't Misbehavin'" incorporate a sonic synergy as the airy string section glides between Cole's line by line phrasing. Also worth mentioning is the Jenkins original "I Thought About Marie," as it sits comfortably beside some of the most time-honored tunes in 20th century popular music. [Some reissues add three bonus tracks.]