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The song was written and published in 1953, with Leigh contributing the lyrics to what was originally a Richards instrumental called "Moonbeam". Frank Sinatra was the first performer to record the song, which became a million-selling hit in late 1953 (and spilling over with popularity into 1954) where it reached the No. 2 spot in the Billboard chart.
"Young at Heart" (Frank Sinatra song), a 1953 pop standard written by Johnny Richards and Carolyn Leigh, covered by many performers "Young at Heart" (Amy Meredith song) "Young at Heart" (Bananarama song), also covered by The Bluebells; Young at Heart (Doris Day and Frank Sinatra album), a soundtrack album from the 1954 film
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L.A. Is My Lady is the fifty-seventh and final solo studio album by American singer Frank Sinatra, released in 1984 and produced by Quincy Jones.While the album was Sinatra's last (excluding the Duets albums), he recorded five further songs, only four of which have been officially released.
"I Left My Heart in San Francisco" - 1:32 "At Long Last Love" - 0:14 "Just One of Those Things - 0:11 "The Candy Man" - 0:26 "The Lady Is a Tramp" - 2:38 "Too Marvelous for Words" - 0:10 "My Way" - 2:55 "Bullfight Music" - 0:17 "One for My Baby (And One More for the Road)" - 0:19 "Good Night Sweetheart" - 0:28 "Theme from New York, New York" - 3:19
Young at Heart is a 1954 American musical film starring Doris Day and Frank Sinatra, and directed by Gordon Douglas. Its supporting cast includes Gig Young, Ethel Barrymore, Alan Hale Jr., and Dorothy Malone. The picture was the first of five films that Douglas directed involving Sinatra, and was a remake of the 1938 film Four Daughters.
Young at Heart was a 10" LP album [1] released by Columbia Records as catalog number CL-6331, on November 1, 1954, containing songs sung by Doris Day and Frank Sinatra from the soundtrack of the movie Young at Heart.
Songs for Young Lovers is the seventh studio album by Frank Sinatra and his first on Capitol Records.It was issued as an 8-song, 10" album (Capitol H-488) and as a 45rpm EP set, [5] but it was the first Sinatra "album" not to have a 78rpm multi-disc-album release.