Mel Tormé's Finest Hour leads off with a Decca recording from 1944 but otherwise concentrates on
Tormé's stints with the Coral and Verve labels between 1953-1960.
Tormé's tight arrangements and smooth crooning made him a natural crossover artist, but he charted no pop hits during this period. Nonetheless, the recordings compiled here are broadly appealing, particularly on songs such as "What Is This Thing Called Love?" that prominently feature
Tormé's jazz-pop vocal group,
the Mel-Tones. "At the Crossroads (Malagueña)" vacillates between
Bill Haley-style rock-a-boogie rhythms and big-band swing, and "What's New at the Zoo?" -- a duet with
Margaret Whiting -- is a silly novelty with a rock & roll guitar solo. "The Hut Sut Song" and
Slim Gaillard's "Cement Mixer" are novelties, too, but ones that jazz purists will find less offensive. In between, there are a number of serious jazz vocal performances and sweetly orchestrated romantic ballads of the sort that earned
Tormé the nickname of "
the Velvet Fog."
Tormé's 1954 recording of his holiday standard "The Christmas Song" is also included, making
Mel Tormé's Finest Hour an inclusive and diverse sampling of music from a versatile artist and exemplary vocalist.