Book Description
The first major biography of the great jazz pianist
and singer, written with the full cooperation of his family.
When he died in 1965, at age forty-five, Nat King Cole was
already a musical legend. As famous as Frank Sinatra, he had
sold more records than anyone but Bing Crosby. Written with
the narrative pacing of a novel, this absorbing biography
traces Cole's rise to fame, from boy-wonder jazz genius to
megastar in a racist society. Daniel Mark Epstein brings Cole
and his times to vivid life: his precocious entrance onto the
vibrant jazz scene of his hometown, Chicago; the creation of
his trio and their rise to fame; the crossover success of
such songs as "Straighten Up and Fly Right"; and
his years as a pop singer and television star, the first
African American to have his own show. Epstein examines
Cole's insistence on changing society through his art rather
than political activism, the romantic love story of Cole and
Maria Ellington, and Cole's famous and influential image of
calm, poise, and elegance, which concealed the personal
turmoil and anxiety that undermined his health.