Twilight on the Trail - Nat King Cole, Alter, Louis
I Don't Want It That Way - Nat King Cole, Sherman
He'll Have to Go - Nat King Cole, Allison
When You're Smiling (The Whole World Smiles with You) - Nat King Cole, Fisher
Goodnight, Irene, Goodnight - Nat King Cole, Ledbetter
Your Cheatin' Heart - Nat King Cole, Williams
One Has My Name, The Other Has My Heart - Nat King Cole, Blair
Skip to My Lou - Nat King Cole, Bergdahl
The Good Times - Nat King Cole, Miller
Sing Another Song (And We'll All Go Home) - Nat King Cole, Burke
Dear Lonely Hearts - Nat King Cole, Anton
Miss You - Nat King Cole, Tobias
Why Should I Cry over You? - Nat King Cole, Conn
Near You - Nat King Cole, Craig
Yearning (Just for You) - Nat King Cole, Burke
My First and Only Lover - Nat King Cole, Kaplan
All over the World - Nat King Cole, Frisch
Oh, How I Miss You Tonight - Nat King Cole, Burke
Lonesome and Sorry - Nat King Cole, Conrad
All by Myself - Nat King Cole, Berlin
Who's Next in Line? - Nat King Cole, McCoy
It's a Lonesome Old Town - Nat King Cole, Kisco, Charles
Misery Loves Company - Nat King Cole, Reed
Two of Nat s country-themed albums on one compact disc! Now, this ain t exactly cry-in-your-beer, honky-tonk material; these two 1962 releases are more along the lines of the country-pop Dean Martin recorded for Reprise, a... more »nd they were every bit as successful; in fact, 1962 s Ramblin Rose stayed on the charts for 162 weeks! And if it seems too long of a jump from the sublime jazz trio sides that started Nat s career, well, consider this further incontrovertible proof that the man could do anything and do it brilliantly.« less
Two of Nat s country-themed albums on one compact disc! Now, this ain t exactly cry-in-your-beer, honky-tonk material; these two 1962 releases are more along the lines of the country-pop Dean Martin recorded for Reprise, and they were every bit as successful; in fact, 1962 s Ramblin Rose stayed on the charts for 162 weeks! And if it seems too long of a jump from the sublime jazz trio sides that started Nat s career, well, consider this further incontrovertible proof that the man could do anything and do it brilliantly.