Stardust (Natalie Cole album)

Stardust
Studio album by Natalie Cole
Released September 24, 1996
Recorded June–September, 1996
Genre Jazz
Length 78:30
Label Elektra
Producer
Natalie Cole chronology
Holly & Ivy
(1994)
Stardust
(1996)
This Will Be: Natalie Cole's Everlasting Love
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Entertainment WeeklyB-[2]

Stardust is a 1996 studio album by American singer Natalie Cole. Released on September 24, 1996, Cole won the Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals for the song "When I Fall in Love"; a duet with Nat King Cole at the 39th Grammy Awards.[3]

The song also won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocal(s) for arrangers Alan Broadbent and David Foster.[4] The album was nominated for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance.

Track listing

  1. "There's a Lull in My Life" (Mack Gordon, Harry Revel) 5:22
  2. "Stardust" (Hoagy Carmichael, Mitchell Parish) 4:40
  3. "Let's Face the Music and Dance" (Irving Berlin) 2:16
  4. "Teach Me Tonight" (Sammy Cahn, Gene de Paul) 3:16
  5. "When I Fall in Love" (duet w/ Nat King Cole) (Edward Heyman, Victor Young) 4:12
  6. "What a Diff'rence a Day Made" (Stanley Adams, María Méndez Grever) 3:16
  7. "Love Letters" (Heyman, Young) 4:49
  8. "He Was Too Good to Me" (Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers) 5:07
  9. "Dindi" (Ray Gilbert, Antonio Carlos Jobim) 4:36
  10. "Two for the Blues" (Natalie Cole, Neal Hefti, Jon Hendricks) 4:22
  11. "If Love Ain't There" (Johnny Burke) 3:25
  12. "To Whom It May Concern" (Nat King Cole, Charlotte Hawkins) 3:27
  13. "Where Can I Go Without You?" (Peggy Lee, Young) 4:23
  14. "Ahmad's Blues" (Ahmad Jamal, Bobby Williams) 4:13
  15. "Pick Yourself Up" (Dorothy Fields, Jerome Kern) 3:31
  16. "If You Could See Me Now" (Tadd Dameron, Carl Sigman) 4:42
  17. "Like a Lover" (Alan and Marilyn Bergman, Dori Caymmi, Dorival Caymmi, Nelson Motta) 5:17
  18. "This Morning It Was Summer" (Bob Haymes) 3:24
  19. "When I Fall in Love" (Spanish Version) (Heyman, Young) 4:12

Charts

Chart (1996)[5] Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 20
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 11

References

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