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This Is Sinatra! is a compilation album by Frank Sinatra, released in 1956. This is the first collection of Sinatra's singles and B-sides with Nelson Riddle . This album is now available on CD (Bluemoon CD 803) All of the tracks also appear on the box set The Complete Capitol Singles Collection and various Capitol reissues.
"When Do I Get to Sing 'My Way'" is a song by American band Sparks, released in October 1994 by Logic Records as the first single from their 1994 album Gratuitous Sax & Senseless Violins. Written and produced by band members Russell and Ron Mael , the song references Frank Sinatra 's signature song " My Way " and was a number seven hit in Germany.
Sinatra Reprise: The Very Good Years is a 1991 single disc compilation taken from the four disc box set The Reprise Collection, a 1990 box set by the American singer Frank Sinatra. For many years, this was the only collection of Sinatra's Reprise work on one disc until 2008's collection Nothing But The Best .
September of My Years is a 1965 studio album by American singer Frank Sinatra, released on Reprise Records in August 1965 [7] on LP and October 1986 on CD.The orchestral arrangements are by Gordon Jenkins, their fifth album collaboration.
My Kind of Broadway is a 1965 studio album by Frank Sinatra. It is a collection of songs from various musicals, pieced together from various recording sessions over the previous four years. The album features songs from nine arrangers and composers, the most ever on a single Sinatra album.
Ironically, this song, which was a long-time resident in Sinatra's repertoire, was cut from the film version, Sinatra's cinematic debut. [ 30 ] [ 31 ] Recorded nearly a year before all other selections, [ 32 ] " Last Night When We Were Young " was difficult, according to Riddle, because about thirty takes were used.
Frank Sinatra first recorded the song for commercial release by Columbia Records on May 1, 1945, having previously recorded it for a V-Disc and his radio show on May 24, 1944. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was during this period that Sinatra used "Put Your Dreams Away" as the closing theme song for his radio series.
Sinatra later featured "All My Tomorrows" on his 1961 album All the Way. Sinatra re-recorded it for his 1969 album My Way, in a new arrangement which writer Charles L. Granata considered superior to the original, [6] and which Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic called "lush and aching". [7] Rolling Stone described the song as "the poignant ...