He’s a lucky guy
- Share via
Young Chang
Freddy Cole picked up the phone from the Keio Plaza Hotel in Tokyo
this week and said, “Moshi Moshi!”
He admitted to knowing only a couple of words in Japanese, “hello”
being one of them. But he loves traveling and performing all over the
world, especially because the jazz baritone and pianist, who is 69, is
anything but quieting down.
The success of his second newest album -- “Merry-Go-Round,” released
in May -- features the tune “Watching You, Watching Me.” Cole considers
this his best-known title today, aside from an older tune called “I Loved
You.” His credits include more than 10 albums and a professional career
that started even before his teenage years.
He will perform at the Orange County Performing Arts Center’s Jazz
Club this weekend.
“I’m satisfied,” Cole said. “You keep your expectations high but you
live day to day, and I consider myself an extremely lucky person. I’m
blessed that I got the blessing of many people.”
Among these people are such jazz legends as Duke Ellington, Count
Basie, Lionel Hampton and the musicians who influenced him while he
studied at the Juilliard School of Music -- John Lewis, Oscar Peterson
and Teddy Wilson.
And, of course, there’s the family.
His brother, the late Nat “King” Cole, reached legendary stardom. His
niece, Natalie Cole, continued the Cole legacy. Freddy Cole is probably
the third-most famous Cole. But he answered, as he probably has for
countless reporters, that he is not his brother’s shadow.
“If you walk around and live in the shadow and clouds, your mind stays
that way,” Freddy Cole said. “But my mind has never been warped.”
He has a sister and two other brothers. He loves them all equally, and
none more or less than he did Nat Cole.
“I loved and respected my brother, but I’m not my brother, I’m me,” he
said.
While the Cole family was musical and both Freddy and Nat Cole
followed in the tradition, the two have different styles, said Helen
Borgers, the midday jazz host and music director for radio station
KLON-FM (88.1).
“Nat was more of a showman who was interested in entertaining,” she
said. “Freddy is also a good entertainer, but he’s more interested in
social commentary and speaking to the times.”
Borgers appreciates the diversity of Freddy Cole’s music.
“He has a wide range of songs that go back to things like ‘Am I Blue’
to things as topical as ‘Brother, Where Are You?”’ she said.
His songs speak to every kind of person, she added.
In 1991, Freddy Cole released an album titled “I’m Not My Brother, I’m
Me.” It includes a Nat Cole medley with tunes from “Straighten Up and Fly
Right,” “L.O.V.E.,” “Mona Lisa,” “Unforgettable,” “Sweet Lorraine” and
“Nature Boy.”
He experienced international fame in the mid-1970s with a series of
European recordings. The album “One More Love Song” sold at least 500,000
copies in Brazil.
He played in clubs throughout the 1980’s and started recording a slew
of albums later that decade.
He loves jazz and he loves performing. It’s his life, his soul, and
it’s a hard connection to explain.
“You’re a changed person once you get on the bandstand,” Cole said.
FYI
WHAT: Freddy Cole performs for the Jazz Club at Founders Hall
WHEN: 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today and Saturday
WHERE: The Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa
COST: $44 and $38
CALL: (714) 740-7878
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.