At Last is an album by the American musician Lou Rawls, released in 1989.[1][2] Promoted as a jazz album, it was timed to the 50th anniversary celebration of Blue Note Records.[3] The album peaked at No. 1 on Billboard's Contemporary Jazz Albums chart.[4]At Last was nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Male".[5] Rawls supported the album by playing several European jazz festivals.[6]
The New York Times wrote that "the album's songs, Mr. Rawls's rich drawling delivery and production that adds discreet pop flavoring to ensemble jazz arrangements all work together to bring jazz, blues and soul inflections into a perfectly relaxed and natural blend."[10]Newsday praised the "superb session help from George Benson and Cornell Dupree."[16]USA Today stated: "Rawls returns beautifully to his roots. At Last brings that velvety baritone back to the record label, the jazz/ blues standards and the small acoustic combo setting that launched his career nearly three decades ago."[17] The Omaha World-Herald noted that, "although Rawls is always nice to hear, the jazz soloists keep the album from drifting into a smooth sameness."[18]