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No One Cares is the seventeenth studio album by Frank Sinatra, released on July 20, 1959.It is generally considered a sequel to Sinatra's 1957 album Where Are You? (also arranged by Gordon Jenkins), and shares a similar sad and lonesome, gloomy theme and concept as In the Wee Small Hours and Only the Lonely (both arranged by Nelson Riddle).
American vocalist Frank Sinatra recorded 59 studio albums and 297 singles in his solo career, spanning 54 years.. Sinatra after having had stints with the quartet The Hoboken Four and with the orchestras of Harry James and Tommy Dorsey [a], launched a solo career in 1943, signing with Columbia Records; his debut album The Voice of Frank Sinatra was issued in 1946.
In 1980, Sinatra's first album in six years was released, Trilogy: Past Present Future, a highly ambitious triple album that features an array of songs from both the pre-rock and rock eras. [317] It was the first studio album of Sinatra's to feature his touring pianist at the time, Vinnie Falcone, and was based on an idea by Sonny Burke. [318]
The Columbia Years 1943–1952: The Complete Recordings is a 1993 box set album by American singer Frank Sinatra. This twelve-disc set contains 285 songs Sinatra recorded during his nine-year career with Columbia Records .
Frank Sinatra, Jack Wolf I'm Beginning to See the Light: 1962: Duke Ellington, Don George, Johnny Hodges, Harry James: I'm Getting Sentimental Over You: 1961: George Bassman, Ned Washington: I'm Glad There Is You: 1947: Jimmy Dorsey, Paul Madeira I'm Gonna Live Till I Die: 1954: Manny Curtis, Al Hoffman, Walter Kent: I'm Gonna Make It All the ...
Portrait of Sinatra – Forty Songs from the Life of a Man is a 1977 compilation album by American singer Frank Sinatra that consists of 40 songs that were recorded for Reprise Records. It spent a total of eighteen non-consecutive weeks in the UK Albums Chart , reaching number-one for two weeks on 2 April 1977.
The 2024 Paris Olympics are officially over following a performance of Frank Sinatra's "My Way" from French artist Yseult during the closing ceremony. ... who was a runner-up on the French version ...
The World We Knew, also known as Frank Sinatra, is a 1967 studio album by American singer Frank Sinatra. [1] The album's title track reached No. 30 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and #1 on the Easy Listening chart in 1967. Its second track, "Somethin' Stupid"—a duet between Sinatra and his daughter Nancy—reached No. 1 on both charts.