Release Date: 10/14/1991
Recording Date: 1/1975
Tracks: 10
Length: 00:29:54 Hrs
Label: Capitol
Type: CD
- Genre/Styles:
- Soul, Urban, Quiet Storm
Album Tracks (10)
What the Critics Say
When Natalie Cole's debut album, Inseparable, came out in 1975, many fans of her late father hoped that she would follow his lead and embrace jazz and pre-rock pop. But Inseparable doesn't sound anything like a Nat "King" Cole session, and it wasn't until 1991's Unforgettable that Natalie Cole recorded the sort of project her father would have recorded. In the 1970s, she was essentially an R&B singer, and the person she was compared to more than anyone was Aretha Franklin. Some reviewers also compared Cole to Chaka Khan, which made sense because Khan certainly didn't escape Franklin's influence either. To be sure, Cole brings a definite Franklin influence to this promising debut album; her admiration for the Queen of Soul comes through on the joyous, gospel-drenched "This Will Be" and the hit ballads "I Can't Say No" and "Inseparable" as well as funky album tracks like "Something for Nothing" and "How Come You Won't Stay Here." But as strong as Franklin's influence is, Cole never fails to sound like her own person. By the end of the 1970s, it was clear that Cole wasn't a soul purist -- and not surprisingly, she picked up a lot of adult contemporary and quiet storm fans along the way. But Inseparable (which Capitol reissued on CD in the early 1990s) is among Cole's most soul-oriented albums, and it is also one of her most essential. ~ Alex Henderson, Rovi
Billboard Music Awards Red Carpet 2012 (PHOTOS)
Peter Jones Dead: Crowded House Drummer Dies of Brain Cancer at 45
17 of the Riskiest Moves in Music History: The Brave, Crazy and Inspirational
Loretta Lynn Three Years Older Than She Claims: Records Show She's 80, Not 77
Jay-Z Pauses Music Career, Janet Jackson Records New LP, Iggy Azalea Flaunts Booty & More
Usher, Tameka Foster Trial: Crooner Claims Ex-Wife Attacked, Spat on Girlfriend
George Jones in Nashville Area Hospital Undergoing Tests
Van Halen Cancel Summer Tour Dates
David Okumu, Singer For the Invisible, Survives Electrical Shocking Onstage
David Lee Roth, Postponed Tour Dates: Van Halen 'Getting Along Famously,' Singer Insists in Video