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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.
A completely new verse replaced the original verse, a new melody replaced the original melody of the refrain, and a mostly new set of lyrics replaced the original lyric of the refrain. What was retained from the 1931 composition was the recurring lyric motif of the song's title.
The following is a sortable table of songs recorded by Frank Sinatra: The column Song lists the song title. The column Year lists the year in which the song was recorded. 1,134 songs are listed in the table. This may not include every song for which a recording by Sinatra exists.
Dean Martin – for his album This Time I'm Swingin'! (1960). [11] Mose Allison – for his album Takes to the Hills (1961). Frank Sinatra – for his album Swing Along with Me (1961) Sammy Davis Jr. – included in the album The Sounds of '66 (1966). Connie Francis – included in her album Connie & Clyde – Hit Songs of the 30s (1968).
Maybe This Time may refer to: "Maybe This Time" (Kander and Ebb song), popularized by Liza Minnelli in the 1972 film Cabaret "Maybe This Time" (Michael Martin Murphey song), 1983; Maybe This Time, a 1995 American sitcom; Maybe This Time, an Australian film starring Judy Morris; Maybe This Time, a Filipino romantic film
The version was less well received, as by this time Sinatra had long moved beyond any babe-in-the-woods persona. [11] Earlier, Sinatra had performed a version for the Old Gold radio show. A rehearsal take for that show in which Sinatra clowns around by voicing it in the manner of Mickey Katz has found popularity with collectors. [11]
The Telegraph explained that the song should have an air of "desperate hope" and that Bowles should feel like "someone teetering on the edge of despair." [5] Talkin' Broadway said " 'Maybe this Time' serving as Sally's internal monologue in response to Cliff's plea", adding that the song "is the only time we see the real person beneath the frivolous girl for whom life is a neverending party ...
Frank Sinatra, on the album Sinatra's Sinatra (1963) Astrud Gilberto, on the album I Haven't Got Anything Better To Do (1969). Carly Simon, on her album My Romance (1990). Wynton Marsalis, on his 1990 album, "Standard Time Vol 3: The Resolution of Romance" released by CBS Records, Inc. with his father, the late Ellis Marsalis, on piano.