Released on June 11, 1991, Unforgettable... with Love Natalie Cole's career-defining tribute to her father, Nat King Cole . This twelfth studio album marked her debut for Elektra Records
and a major departure from her previous R&B sound toward traditional pop and jazz standards. Production & Artistic Significance The album was produced by a powerhouse team including David Foster Tommy LiPuma André Fischer
. It is most famous for its closing track, "Unforgettable," which used then-revolutionary technology to create a "virtual duet" between Natalie and her late father. This recording helped Natalie embrace her family legacy and solidified her reputation as a sophisticated jazz-pop vocalist. Awards & Commercial Success natalie cole unforgettable with love 1991 elektrarar
Beyond the collector jargon, Unforgettable... With Love changed the music industry. It kicked off a trend of pop stars covering standards (Rod Stewart, Diana Krall, and later, Lady Gaga and Tony Bennett). It also allowed Natalie Cole to finally make peace with her father’s shadow. When she died in 2015, obituaries led with that 1991 duet.
The "Elektrarar" pressing, whatever its true origin, is a fascinating footnote in that legacy. It represents the moment when the physical artifact—the vinyl or CD—became a treasure hunt, a piece of history that contains a small, silent "error" or "rarity" reminding us that even in mass production, uniqueness exists. Released on June 11, 1991, Unforgettable
Release Year: 1991 Label: Elektra Records Key Track: "Unforgettable" (Duet with Nat King Cole)
In the landscape of early 1990s pop, dominated by the rise of hip-hop, the grit of grunge, and the polished sheen of adult contemporary, one album achieved a seemingly impossible feat: it made the Great American Songbook cool again. The Legacy of the Album Beyond the collector
Natalie Cole’s Unforgettable… with Love was not just a covers album; it was a cultural event. Released on Elektra Records, the project saw the R&B hitmaker step away from the synthesizers and drum machines of her 1980s success to embrace the orchestral jazz standards made famous by her father, Nat King Cole. The result was a critical and commercial juggernaut that swept the Grammy Awards and introduced a timeless catalog of music to a brand-new generation.
Perhaps the most bizarre "Elektrarar" is a specific CD pressing from a plant in Terre Haute, Indiana. A handful of collectors have reported a misprint where the spine of the back cover reads "ELEKTRARAR 60999-2" instead of "ELEKTRA 60999-2."
This is likely a simple typesetting error from 1991 that was caught and corrected within a single day. Only a few hundred copies escaped into the wild, primarily in the Midwest. For "error sleuth" collectors, this is the Holy Grail of Unforgettable... With Love variants. The CD plays perfectly, but the misspelling makes it a conversation piece.