Skip to Main Content

The Buffalo News Summer Jazz Series: The Legendary Freddy Cole with Special Guest Guitarist George Kane

Sunday, July 9, 2017

2 pm EDT

Freddy Cole. Image courtesy of the artist.

FREE
Delaware Stairs

The younger brother of Nat King Cole and uncle of Natalie Cole, singer/pianist Freddy Cole sounds a great deal like his celebrated sibling, yet has a personality of his own. Cole, whose vocals tend to be a bit darker and slightly rougher, began playing piano at five or six. He debuted on vinyl in 1952 when he recorded the single “The Joke’s on Me” for the obscure Chicago-based Topper Records. His next single, “Whispering Grass,” on Columbia’s Okeh Records, was a moderate hit in 1953.

In the 1960s and 1970s, he developed a small following while recording for various small labels. Cole founded his First Shot label in the 1980s and went on to record for Sunnyside and LaserLight in the early 1990s. A few years later, he signed with Fantasy and enjoyed greater visibility with Le Grand Freddy.

By 2000, Cole had signed with Telarc and released his first disc for the label, Merry-Go-Round, followed by Rio de Janeiro Blue in 2001. In the Name of Love appeared two years later and featured Cole’s approach to soft pop hits made famous by Smokey Robinson, Bonnie Raitt, and Van Morrison, among others. In 2004, GRP reissued Cole’s 1964 recording Waiter, Ask the Man to Play the Blues.

In the mid-2000s, Cole returned on the Highnote label for several well-received albums including 2005’s This Love of Mine, 2006’s Because of You, and 2010’s Freddy Cole Sings Mr. B, for which he earned a Grammy nomination.

Over the next decade, Cole continued his productive relationship with Highnote, releasing 2011’s Talk to Me featuring guitarist Randy Napoleon, saxophonist Harry Allen, trumpeter Terell Stafford, and others. Two years later, he returned with This and That, followed by Singing the Blues in 2014. In 2016, Cole paid tribute to his late brother, Nat King Cole, with He Was the King.

About the Series

The Buffalo News Summer Jazz Series concerts take place on the museum’s Delaware Stairs overlooking Hoyt Lake on five Sundays at 2 pm, from July 9 through August 6. Admission is free. In case of rain, performances will be held in the Albright-Knox’s Auditorium on a first-come, first-seated basis. Indoor concerts are free with museum admission (and free for Albright-Knox Members). View 2017 Series

Parking

Limited parking is available in the museum’s parking lot on Elmwood Avenue. Parking is $5 for visitors and $3 for Members. Please bring your parking ticket into the museum to have it validated at the Admissions Desk. There is also parking available on the roads surrounding the Albright-Knox. Please take care to adhere to all parking regulations. Violators will be ticketed and/or towed. View Parking Map (PDF)