Nat King Cole -
Hittin' The Ramp (rec. 1936-43, Resonance comp. 2019)
Way back in 1991, Mosaic released a weighty box (18 CD or 27 LP, your choice

) with the complete Capitol recordings of the King Cole Trio. However, Nat's earlier work has never enjoyed a comparable rebirth. Until now. Jazz label Resonance put together a relatively diminutive 7 CD (or 10 LP) collection of his recordings from 1936 through 1943 when he joined Capitol. The label website sez:
Released in partnership with the Nat King Cole estate, Resonance Records’ HITTIN’ THE RAMP: THE EARLY YEARS (1936-1943) is the first large-scale collection of the pivotal early recordings (1936-1943) of Nat’s 29-year recording career. Most tracks are receiving their first official release in this meticulously restored set of original live-to-disk recordings.
This definitive 7CD and limited-edition 10LP collection draws upon a wide range of sources, including many newly-discovered tracks unearthed for the first time from archives located all over the world, such as “Trompin” (jukebox-only release for Cinematone, 1939), “What’cha Know Joe” (undocumented radio performance, 1940 — now the earliest known recording of Nat “on the air”), “The Romany Room is Jumpin’” (private recording, 1941) and “Beautiful Moons Ago” (longer alternate take, 1943). Sessions include Nat at age 17, playing piano in his brother’s band in Chicago, 1936; the first King Cole Trio recordings from 1938, made for radio broadcast only, for Standard Transcriptions; further radio transcription sessions for Standard, Davis & Schwegler, Keystone, plus his first (uncredited) session for MacGregor, with vocalist Anita Boyer; the Ammor Records Session (Spring 1940 – the first commercial-release sessions for the trio), the Decca Recordings (1940-41), the small-label sessions for Excelsior and Premier labels (1943), many previously-uncirculating Armed Forces Radio performances, and, with producer Norman Granz at the helm, early jazz sessions with Lester Young (Granz historic, first session as a producer) and Dexter Gordon, originally released on Philo and Mercury, respectively.
The first two discs give us his earliest commercial session for Decca, followed by a series of radio transcriptions running through mid-1939. Sound quality is remarkable, especially in view of the scarcity of the source material. Nat's melodic piano style and warm, jazzy vocals are remarkably similar to the legendary Capitol recordings. Guitarist Oscar Moore, a fixture in the King Cole Trio until 1947, appears here along with bassist Wesley Prince who departed in 1941 before Cole hit paydirt.
Some historical recordings are of, well, historical interest only. But this collection is a pure joy from start to finish.

on the Sam-O-Meter. And it's on Spotify!

