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"Full Moon and Empty Arms" is a 1945 popular song by Buddy Kaye and Ted Mossman, based on Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2. [1]The best-known recording of the song was made by Frank Sinatra in 1945 [2] and reached No. 17 in the Billboard charts.
In 2015, seventy years after first being recorded by Frank Sinatra, Bob Dylan released a cover version of “Full Moon and Empty Arms” on his Shadows in the Night album of Sinatra standards and praised Buddy Kaye in his MusiCares Person of the Year speech as one of the great songwriters who may not be well known in these times but deserves ...
"Full Moon and Empty Arms" (Sergei Rachmaninoff, Ted Mossman, Buddy Kaye) - 3:13 "Oh! What It Seemed to Be" (George David Weiss, Bernie Benjamin, Frank Carle) - 2:59 "I Have But One Heart" (Marty Symes, J. Farrow) - 3:13 Recorded on November 30, 1945 "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You" (Bing Crosby, Ned Washington, Victor Young)
Two songs recorded by Frank Sinatra have roots in the concerto: "I Think of You", from the second theme of the first movement, and "Full Moon and Empty Arms", from the second theme of the third movement. [83] Eric Carmen's 1975 ballad "All by Myself" is based on the second movement. [91]
The album was officially announced on December 9, 2014, [10] and two singles, "Full Moon and Empty Arms" and "Stay with Me", were released the following month. [ 11 ] Just prior to the album's release, a Dylan publicist announced that 50,000 free copies of the CD would be given away to randomly selected readers of AARP The Magazine , a bi ...
Fuchsia Swing Song; Full House; Full Moon and Empty Arms; Fun to Be Fooled (Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg, Ira Gershwin, 1934) Funkallero (Bill Evans, 1971) Funk in Deep Freeze (Hank Mobley, 1957) Funny Man (Bill Evans and Larry Coleman, 1967) Funny (Not Much) (Bob Merrill, Marcia Neil, Philip Broughton, Hughie Prince, 1952)
Full Moon and Empty Arms; T. Till the End of Time (song) This page was last edited on 8 February 2018, at 19:37 (UTC). Text ...
Scott Yanow of AllMusic stated "Although that session (comprised of four Hubbard compositions, one of Walton's songs, and Randy Weston's "Cry Me Not") is excellent, it is the full album of previously unreleased material from an all-star quintet that is of greatest interest". [1]