Allan Harris has oft been told his vocal style bears close resemblance to the late
Nat King Cole, so he has followed that sentiment by concocting a program from
Cole's repertoire for performance. These sessions from the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. have him interpreting most of
Cole's most well-known numbers, with half of them being ballads. There is no fault with that, primarily because
Harris sounds quite similar, but not perfectly like
Nat. His personalized lyric phrasing is his own, while his good piano playing is not as masterful as his hero, which would be a daunting task anyway. Saxophonist Jesse Jones plays a more perfunctory rather than complementary role in the band, and at times is a bit overbearing for the general dynamics of the music. The concert is an up-and-down affair, gaining and losing momentum to the point where a coach would drastically improve the pacing. Overall the sound of the band is tight and unassuming, pleasant, light and carefree. There is a drawback with the production values, as the recording is a bit thin and not completely clear and robust. The typical songs you expect are here -- "For Sentimental Reasons," "Love," "Walkin' My Baby Back Home," "Mona Lisa," "Unforgettable," etc., with "I'll Be Seeing You" less like
Nat and more like
Harris. "Non Dimenticar/Pretend" comes closest to a direct cop of
Cole, sporting a nice Latin baseline. Of the more lively selections, the opener "It's Only a Paper Moon" differs in that
Harris improvises in his own way on the second chorus. The other variation "Nature Boy" is adapted in bold and dramatic modal trim, with the fluttery, overblown sax of Jones shooting a spark. The introductory arrangement on "Straighten Up & Fly Right" is somewhat unique with a stop-start technique employed, while Jones eschews a boppish
Richie Cole-like line during "Too Young." Putting this up against a
Nat or
Freddy Cole recording might be unfair, for
Harris does exude his own soul, but as a single concept phase in his career, it's a decent, unobtrusive aside. ~ Michael G. Nastos