* En anglais uniquement
With his warm, velvety sound, singer and pianist
Freddy Cole earned a reputation as an urbane performer whose music was the epitome of straight-ahead jazz and R&B. Initially breaking through with his 1953 hit "Whispering Grass,"
Cole drew favorable comparisons to (and spent much of his early career in the shadow of) his older brother, singer
Nat King Cole. However, after issuing 1990's
I'm Not My Brother, I'm Me, he enjoyed a mid-career resurgence, releasing a bevy of well-regarded albums and picking up four Grammy nominations, including one for 2000's
Merry Go-Round, 2010's
Freddy Cole Sings Mr. B, and 2018's My Mood Is You.
Lionel Frederick Cole was born in 1931 and grew up in Chicago, Illinois where his minister father and musically inclined mother encouraged him to start playing piano around age five. As with his piano-playing older brothers,
Ike Cole and
Nat King Cole,
Freddy Cole excelled at music, and by his teens was already a gifted performer. Along with piano, he was also a talented football player. However, after sustaining a sports-related injury in high school, he decided to focus on a career in music. He honed his skills first at Chicago's Roosevelt Institute, and then at the Juilliard School of Music in New York before earning his master's degree at the New England Conservatory of Music. Following his education, he made his recorded debut with the 1952 single "The Joke's on Me" for the obscure Chicago-based Topper Records. His next single, "Whispering Grass," on
Columbia's OKeh label, was a moderate hit in 1953, after which he spent several months on the road alongside
Johnny Coles and
Benny Golson in the
Earl Bostic Band. In 1964, he made his full-length debut with
Waiter, Ask the Man to Play the Blues on Dot, backed by bassist
Milt Hinton and drummer
Osie Johnson.
Over the next decade,
Cole stayed busy issuing a run of albums, including titles like 1976's As Long as I'm Singing, 1978's One More Love Song, and 1980's Right from the Heart. He also founded his own First Shot label. In 1990, he returned to more regular recording with
I'm Not My Brother, I'm Me, a sophisticated trio date featuring guitarist
Ed Zad and bassist
Eddie Edwards. The album marked a career resurgence for the singer/pianist, whose profile continued to rise over the next several years with efforts like 1993's
This Is Life, 1997's To the Ends of the Earth, and 1999's Le Grand Freddy.
By 2000,
Cole had signed with Telarc and released
Merry-Go-Round, for which he earned a Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Vocal Album. He followed it up with the Latin-tinged
Rio de Janeiro Blue in 2001 and In the Name of Love in 2003, the latter of which featured an approach to soft pop hits made famous by
Smokey Robinson,
Bonnie Raitt, and
Van Morrison, among others. In 2004, GRP reissued his 1964 recording
Waiter, Ask the Man to Play the Blues.
Cole returned to the Highnote label for several well-received albums including 2005's
This Love of Mine and 2006's
Because of You. Also in 2006, he gained further attention as the subject of the documentary film The Cole Nobody Knows. He also earned a second Grammy nomination for 2007's
Music Maestro Please.
With 2010's
Freddy Cole Sings Mr. B, he paid homage to longtime friend and fellow Chicago-bred baritone
Billy Eckstine. The album earned
Cole his third Grammy nomination. A year later, he returned with
Talk to Me, featuring guitarist
Randy Napoleon, saxophonist
Harry Allen, trumpeter
Terell Stafford, and others. Two years later, he issued
This and That, followed by
Singing the Blues in 2014. He then paid tribute to his late brother
Nat King Cole with 2016's
He Was the King. The Grammy-nominated My Mood Is You arrived in 2018 and featured contributions from saxophonist
Joel Frahm, guitarist
Randy Napoleon, and others.
Freddy Cole died in Atlanta, Georgia on June 27, 2020 due to complications from cardiovascular disease; he was 88 years old. ~ Matt Collar