
Tribute to Sinatra:
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies

Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
This
obit & appreciation first appeared in a different (and slightly shorter) form on
the late Cinemania Online
website. It was written immediately after the singer's death, during an intense
72-hour over the weekend of May 15-17, 1998. During that time, I re-immersed myself in
much of the Sinatra music I've loved for so many years, and even re-discovered some things
I'd forgotten about. And that was when I got the idea for Franksville...
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies
Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies
Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies
Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies
Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
The Columbia Years
(1943-52)
The Capitol Years
(1953-62)
The Reprise Years
(1960-81)
Sinatra & Movies
Live! at Radio City Music Hall,
1994
Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
|
Ring-A-Ding-Ding!

By Jim Emerson
When the bell finally tolled for Francis Albert
Sinatra, it struck my ears as nothing less than a resounding "Ring-A-Ding-Ding!"
Sure, it was sobering to realize that the Chairman of the Board had really and truly crapped out at last, cashed in his chips, and headed off for the eternal bar at The Big
Casino. (That was Sinatra's phrase; I'm just guessing, but I'll bet there are no $2 tables
there -- and that the odds, like the booze and the buffets, are just a little bit better
than anything we can get down here in Frank's World.)
But for interminable months since his heart attack in 1997 the
imminent prospect of his
death had loomed ahead as something dire and unavoidable,
like "My Way," and arousing in me similar mixed feelings of dread and
anticipation. When Sinatra finally died on May 14, 1998, I felt a kind of relief that the
proud man's humiliation hadn't dragged on any longer. It seemed less like an occasion to
mourn the mortal than to celebrate the immortal. He'd gone out quietly, slipping into the
darkness as he did in "Angel Eyes" with a plaintive " 'Scuse me while I
disappear....," but at last his music was free to speak for itself.
For as long as I can remember, Frank Sinatra has
been a fact of life. Only, of course, much bigger. Everything
about the legendary Sinatra seemed larger than life and made out of something more
durable and substantial, to boot. And now, the end is no longer near it's here, and
it's history. But since plastic discs are indeed less prone to decay than flesh, the
legend survives the man.
So, let's hoist a Jack Daniel's
(double, on the rocks) to Francis Albert Sinatra, who made this toast way back in 1959:
Drink up, all you people
Order anything you see
Have fun, you happy people
The drinks, and the laughs, are on me
-- from "Angel Eyes"
(on Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely)
Despite all the dizzying ups and downs of his
personal and professional life, he was tough, stubborn, and damn near indestructible. In
fact, the only force that seemed strong enough to damage or diminish him was his own nasty
and fickle temper, which he let loose all too often -- not only in private against his
friends and family, but onstage in front of paying audiences, where the target was usually
some reporter or some rock music he didn't like. If he was going to use the stage as his
bully pulpit, he would have been much wiser to let the songs do the talking -- something
he'd always excelled at, anyway.
The pettiness and viciousness that sometimes
erupted from Sinatra struck me as unworthy of a figure (an artist) of his stature
and (musical) eloquence. As a public figure, he reminded me in some ways of John Wayne.
Let me explain: I grew up in the '60s and '70s when both of them seemed to be outmoded
American archetypes, totems of a corrupt and crumbling Establishment (particularly in
their associations with Richard Nixon, whom I despised). More than just hopeless
squares, Old Fogies, or even has-beens, they struck me as foul-tempered bullies, bitter
about how over-the-hill they obviously were. And while I still don't think that impression
was inaccurate (given their public behavior), I had no idea they were also
honest-to-god artists of the highest caliber. It wasn't until I went to college and
discovered Red River and The Searchers, Songs
for Swingin' Lovers! and In the Wee Small Hours,
that I fell in love with their work, and learned to separate the art from the men.
(I always thought of art as the highest and truest expression of the
human soul, so it took me a long time to accept that many -- too many -- artists are
assholes, who somehow think their art excuses or redeems their lives. Well, I'm just glad
I didn't have to know 'em -- like I'm glad I didn't know Picasso or Peckinpah. These guys
may very well deserve to fry in hell for their rotten behavior toward their fellow human
beings, but at least we didn't have to deal with 'em; we just get to savor the glimpses of
heaven they left behind in their work.)
Sinatra sure crammed a lot of livin'
into his lifelong term as a Living Legend and Chairman of the Board. Let's see, there were
those dizzying career ups and downs, the wives, the affairs, the movie career, the
political makeover that turned a Kennedy Democrat into a Reagan Republican.
Where
do you even begin to approach a life and legacy of this scale? (And once you get started,
how do you ever finish?) It's all been rehashed so many times, anyway: bobbysoxer idol,
tempestuous relationship with Ava Gardner, career comeback sparked by winning an Oscar for
From Here to Eternity (1955), the Rat Pack, the Vegas shenanigans, marriage to a
21-year old Mia Farrow when he was 50 (I don't want to hear anything more about
young women and their "father figures" from Ms. Farrow), the premature
retirement, "Ol' Blue Eyes Is Back," "The Main Event" at Madison
Square Garden, "The Ultimate Event" tour (with Sammy Davis Jr. and Liza Minnelli
-- after Dino dropped out), phoning in Duets
If the most of the music hadn't
been so great, it could easily have gotten lost in the clutter. And sometimes maybe it
did. So now's a good time to start setting the record(s) straight.
Bandleader Artie Shaw (that other
famous big-band musician who was married to Ava Gardner) has been credited as the first
pop music artist to build a career on quality popular songs of the 20th Century, no matter
what their age, rather than whatever flash-in-the-pan novelty happened to be climbing up
the Hit Parade that week. Most of the great American standards (by Irving Berlin,
Jerome Kern, the Gershwins, Rogers & Hart, Cole Porter) had already been written by
the time Sinatra signed as a solo singer with Columbia Records. But Sinatra (and his
labels) were less interested in ephemeral hits than in making a long-term investment in
great songs sung by a great vocalist with top-notch orchestrations and musicians to back
him up. It's an investment that has paid off. Sinatra isn't just the greatest
popularizer of the American Popular Songbook -- he helped write that book.
No, he wasn't a songwriter, but his taste was essential in shaping and defining the
timeless songs we now regard as "standards." Without Sinatra, many of
these magnificent tunes (quite a few associated with Broadway stage musicals that flopped
and disappeared) would be forgotten today.
The bulk of Sinatra's work as
a solo recording artist (excluding his formative gigs as featured vocalist with the big
bands of Harry James, and then Tommy Dorsey on RCA), can be divided into three parts,
roughly corresponding with his long-term contracts at three labels (Columbia, Capitol and
Reprise). Each set of records reveals a distinctive stage in his stylistic evolution, and
the stylistic influence of the arranger (Axel Stordahl, Nelson Riddle or Gordon Jenkins)
with whom he was most closely associated at the time.
The
Columbia Years (1943-52). The skinny kid with the bow tie who made all the
bobbysoxers swoon was known in the '40s simply as "The Voice." And it was some instrument no
cracks, no dings, it gleamed like a brand new Ford and offered the smoothest of rides,
thanks to the suspension provided by Axel Stordahl's cushy strings. The best Columbia
records (like, say, "Nancy With the Laughing Face" still the finest of
his several versions) are polished to a blinding sheen, although next to Sinatra's mature
work, they can sound a little callow and impersonal. Technically, however, The Voice was
still pure and pitch-perfect. His trademarks were elongated tones and often-undetectable
breathing, a couple of things he picked up from observing trombonist-bandleader Dorsey.
All that style was wasted, however, on the ridiculous novelty tunes he claimed Columbia
producer Mitch Miller sometimes forced him to cut.
Sinatra later re-recorded
much of his Columbia catalogue under more artistically congenial conditions at Capitol.
It's interesting to compare, for example, his versions of "Saturday Night Is the
Loneliest Night of the Week," a perfectly swell 1945 Columbia record featuring a
surprisingly swingin' Stordahl arrangement. Stack it next to Billy May's brash and brassy
1959 treatment from Capitol's Come
Dance With Me, however, and the earlier track is simply blown off the turntable.
It's not just the way the trumpets signal the blast-off, or even May's propulsive tempo
(forceful without sounding forced, it's still a lot faster than the nice 'n' easy "heartbeat tempo" Nelson
Riddle preferred). The younger Sinatra consistently draws out the word "weeeeek"
to the end of the measure, filling up the designated space in a way that seems, in
retrospect, not necessarily paint-by-numbers but certainly cautious and conservative. The
older Sinatra is more confident and relaxed, clipping the lyrics in a conversational style
and freely exploring the spaces around the melody. In a delightful touch, he casually
bites off "week," using the percussive snap of the hard "k" as a
little rhythm accent.
The
Capitol Years (1953-62). Sinatra would never again stir the sensational hysteria
that made bobbysoxers scream and swoon at the height of '40s "Sinatramania." At
Capitol he just made better records. This is Sinatra's vintage period. After two lightly
swinging 10-inchers with Nelson Riddle, Songs for Young Lovers and Swing Easy (issued together on one CD), his first full-length album for the
label was a gorgeous change of pace: In
the Wee Small Hours. It had been six years since his last Columbia single --
something called "The Huckle Buck" that isn't awful (like the infamous Mitch
Miller-produced Dagmar duet, "Mama Will Bark") but isn't exactly worthy of an
artist of Sinatra's stature, either -- and The Voice's voice had subtly begun to take on
the deeper, darker timber that would mark his maturity; artistically he'd passed through
puberty.
Although he still concentrated
on primo standards from the turn of the century through the '40s, at Capitol he was also
encouraged to find a more contemporary sound. As a result, Sinatra not only resurrected
his recording career, he split himself into two complementary personae: the barroom
balladeer (he preferred to call himself a "saloon singer") and the
finger-poppin' swinger. It's been said that he created the "concept album" by
using the new 12-inch LP format to explore a series of songs set in a particular mood.
(Although, in fact, he released "concept" 78 sets at Columbia, such as The Voice and Frankly Sentimental, in the '40s.) The
dark-toned ballad collections featured the solitary Sinatra, leaning dejectedly against a
lamppost or drowning his sorrows in booze and cigarettes, all alone at the far end of the
bar (In the Wee Small Hours, Only
the Lonely, No One Cares, Point of No Return arranged by
Nelson Riddle, Gordon Jenkins or Stordahl). The flip side of this personality was the
swingin' Sinatra, the suave hepcat who wore his hat at a cocky angle and projected an aura
of effortless and unassailable cool, a perfect balance of confidence, nonchalance and
sophistication (Songs for Swingin' Lovers, A Swingin' Affair, Come
Fly With Me, Come Dance With Me
arranged by Riddle or May). Both alter-egos were equally authentic. As with any good
doppelganger, neither could exist without the other, and it's only by putting them
together that you can discover the quintessential Sinatra.
At Capitol Sinatra worked with
a number of arrangers to produce albums that are stunners by any standard: the
aforementioned Point of No Return
with Stordahl, Come Fly
and Come Dance with May, No One Cares with Jenkins. But his
signature collaborations with Nelson Riddle the only arranger who could bring out
the best in both Sinatras top them all. Riddle loved the French impressionist
composers, like Debussy and Ravel, and his arrangements have a similar lightness and
transparency. Riddle's strings dance above Sinatra's voice, rather than cushioning it from
below like Stordahl's heavier orchestrations. Many of his swingin'est charts take a tip
from Ravel's Bolero: They start off understatedly, then slowly gather volume and
momentum toward a cathartic climax.
The most famous example is
probably the celebrated 1956 version of Cole Porter's "I've Got You Under My
Skin" (on Songs For
Swingin' Lovers), a track so irresistible that it becomes definitive, another
standard claimed as Sinatra's own. (Many years later, on the 1991 Duets album
with Bono of the Irish pop band U2, the same song also marked what Sinatra expert Will
Friedwald called "the bottom of the barrel, the all-time worst thing Sinatra has ever
been involved with -- worse than the horrors of the '50s, '60s, and '70s combined."
That's from Friedwald's definitive and indispensable book about Sinatra's recordings, Sinatra! The Song
Is You: A Singer's Art.)
Riddle's tempos fit the
laid-back attitude of Sinatra's vocals like a finely-tailored suit, and often the singer
would casually hang just behind the gently rolling rhythm they'd likened to a natural
heartbeat, deliciously biding his own sweet time and in no hurry to catch up. Riddle's
somber settings for In the Wee Small Hours and Only the Lonely wrap Sinatra's dejected vocals in the
sonic equivalent of nocturnal darkness. You can almost see the shadows; you can definitely
feel their chilly presence in your bones. If Riddle drew inspiration from Ravel for the
swingin' tunes, these orchestrations suggest the static, limpid, liquid qualities of
Debussy's orchestrations. (More about these two moody masterpieces in the accompanying
discography, and in Plattersville,
where you'll find my picks of Sinatra's best albums ).
With the
exception of the scathingly brilliant The Manchurian Candidate, an
uncategorizable masterpiece that injects a potent dose of the absurdist cynicism of black
comedy into a political thriller bristling with intrigue and suspense, Sinatra never made
a movie that could quite match the high-level artistry of these records (although pictures
like Some Came Running, On the Town, From Here to Eternity, The Man with
the Golden Arm and even Suddenly are terrific). He didn't like the tedious
process of moviemaking, and probably resented his limited power to control it, especially
after he became accustomed to having complete artistic freedom in the recording studio.
But I've often wondered if
his experience as an actor, learning to convey emotion through the convincing delivery of
dialogue, had anything to do with the development of his fresh and conversational singing
style. Sinatra and his best arrangers (Riddle, Jenkins, Stordahl, even Costa on a good
day, like "There Used to Be a Ballpark") made records that were more than
transcriptions of verses, choruses, and bridges -- they were little three-minute movies,
with their own narrative (as well as musical) rhythms and climaxes. Heck, even
Sinatra's album covers are little single-frame motion pictures: the images on Wee Small Hours, No One Cares, or She Shot Me Down could be 8x10s or
frame enlargements from classic films noir.
On record, and particularly in concert,
Sinatra sang would strut and fret his hour upon the stage as an actor in character,
his vocal performance following (and occasionally deviating from) the "script"
of music and lyrics. But, like the great movie stars (and Sinatra could be Cary
Grant or James Cagney or John Wayne, depending on the song), these characters were all
parts of himself. There's a world of difference (and experience) between the
vest-bustin' young lover in "Oh! Look at Me Now" and the jaded, depressed
loser/loner in "Only the Lonely" -- but there's no question that they're
both Sinatra.
The startling sense of intimacy
that came through on Sinatra's records was unprecedented, the happy result of several
developments: Improved microphone technology captured sound with a sensitivity and detail
never heard before. Stereo recording opened up new dimensions of space and depth,
properties Sinatra's records showcased with splendid subtlety while others were still
toying with Ping-Pong novelty effects. Meanwhile Sinatra's miraculous ability to create
the impression of singing and talking at the same time not only enhanced the exquisite
musicality of his performances (in contrast, say, to Rex Harrison's famously theatrical
recitation of lyrics-as-dialogue in My Fair Lady), it also made you feel he was
singing directly to you, a quality unique to the art of records. (And if you've
ever sat alone in the dark with a bottle of scotch and "Only the Lonely," you
know that Frank can tell you things about your own life that even your best friends don't
understand.)
As Sinatra's voice opened up to new
emotional colors, his selection of material also became more personal and idiosyncratic.
He often reached back into his Columbia catalog to practice his alchemy, a Midas touch
that could turn dusty old tunes into musical gold. More than ever, songs that weren't even
written for him may as well have been by the time he'd recorded them.
The
Reprise Years (1960-81). Reprise was Sinatra's own label, a place where he could
do things His Way and for better or worse, he did. His Capitol contract overlapped
the formation of Reprise, so for a couple years he put out albums on both labels. But from
the start, the characteristics that distinguish the Capitol Sinatra from the Reprise
Sinatra are almost as apparent as the differences between the Columbia Sinatra and the
Capitol one.
Ring-A-Ding-Ding
was the kickoff, a delightful set of swingin' songs (recorded in 1960, while he
was still with Capitol) that feels like a slight comedown only because of the peaks
Sinatra had reached at Capitol. Already there are audible changes: As Sinatra's voice
continued to darken and become more brittle, Reprise tended to overcompensate with echo
the recording equivalent of smearing Vaseline on the camera lens. That old trick
may have smoothed out some of the rough spots, but it was at the expense of some warmth
and intimacy. There's an artificial, faintly hollow and metallic ring to the vocals, which
are also pushed farther back into the mix. The coldness and distance could be subtly
alienating.
Nevertheless, there's some great stuff here
including the elegiac, autumnal masterpiece "September of My Years," with Gordon
Jenkins. The collaborations with Count Basie, Duke Ellington and Antonio Carlos Jobim are
lively and enjoyable. "Moonlight Sinatra" (a bit of conceptual lunacy that
collects standards with the word "moon" in their titles) and "Frank Sinatra
Sings the Academy Award Winners" are both lovely records arranged by Riddle
but although they each contain some classic songs, the flimsy "concepts" on
which they're based seem almost arbitrary compared to their predecessors' at Capitol.
Sinatra was vocal about his contempt
for rock 'n' roll in the '60s and '70s most likely because it threatened to turn
him into an anachronism. (Just for the novelty of it, you should hear his Chubby
Checkerized rendition of "Everybody's Twistin'," arranged and conducted by Neil
Hefti, on the CD version of 1962's brilliant Sinatra and Swingin' Brass. It's weird -- but it's
also fascinating, kind of like a car crash.) Sinatra's increasing feelings of estrangement
from mainstream pop culture, combined with a discouraging scarcity of decent material,
finally drove him into temporary "retirement" in 1971. (Well, collaborations
with Rod McKuen might make anybody feel like giving up.) Still, before he went (only to
re-emerge with much fanfare four years later as "Ol' Blue Eyes"), he managed to
find some contemporary tunes that suited him quite nicely among them the breezy and
haunting "Summer Wind" (a dash of organ seasoning Riddle's arrangement) and the
lightweight but irresistible "Strangers in the Night" (a song, legend has it,
that Sinatra initially turned down in disgust, but which turned into a 1966 smash hit and
forever made a household phrase out of "doo-be-doo-be-doo").
Sinatra turned Paul Anka's self-aggrandizing
"My Way" into his anthem, the defiant declaration of a man who secretly fears
that he's just an Old Fogey. It's fascinating to listen as the singer's tone of triumphant
bravado is eventually swamped by a rising tide of bitterness and self-pity the very
qualities that qualify it as the definitive theme song of the Nixon era.
And, of course, there's Trilogy, the 1980
three-disc career capstone that fittingly showcases the best and the worst of late
Sinatra. By this time we'd grown accustomed to the fact that these two things had become
inseparable and we'd have to take what we could get sparks of enduring artistry
right alongside occasional appalling lapses in taste. The latter propensity achieves its
apotheosis, its most grandiose and excruciatingly protracted expression, in Jenkins'
lugubrious (not to mention ludicrous and pompous) so-called "cantata," which
attempts to do for Francis Albert what Handel did for Jesus. It takes up the entire second
CD and is entitled "Reflections on the Future in Three Tenses." Luckily
Sinatra's future proved to be less dire than Jenkins seemed to predict: The wretched
pseudo-collaborations on the "Duets" discs were awful, but it never got as bad
as this.
Some people wished that
Sinatra, his pipes cracked and rusty with age, had packed it in earlier. But his follow-up
to Trilogy was an
underrated near-masterpiece called She
Shot Me Down (1981). This collection of saloon songs, reeking of stale smoke and
flat beer, is the closest Sinatra ever got to the moody brilliance of Wee Small Hours and Only the Lonely. The title comes from
Cher's 1966 single, "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)," written by future
Republican and Palm Springs mayor Sonny Bono which, incredibly, Sinatra and Jenkins
slow down and darken until it turns into a damn fine ballad, reeking of cheap whiskey and
stale cigarette smoke. That's a compliment Sinatra commits himself to this album
with more emotional authenticity than he'd shown in ages.

"This may be the last time we will be
together."
-- Frank Sinatra, Radio City Music Hall, April 1994
I saw
Sinatra perform in the flesh only once, on what may well have been his final
tour. It was April 23, 1994, at Radio City Music Hall. Opening was Don Rickles, who
did his usual assortment of appalling and incoherent racist insult jokes and wound up with
a song about loving America and loving your Mom. It was really an awful spectacle --
vulgar, crass, tacky, embarrassing. But, somehow, the abrasive/unctuous pettiness of
Rickles was just the right thing to set the stage for Sinatra; the sputtering comic was
sort of like the straight shot of cheap booze that makes the rest of your drinks taste
better for the whole night.
Despite some fluffed lyrics (and a
couple fractured notes), The Man lived up to The Legend that night (which indeed still
included the dreaded, inescapable "My Way"). Like many great artists,
particularly those whose powers are on the wane, Sinatra was fully aware of his
limitations and sometimes found inspired ways around them. I'd still rather listen to the
unsteady, cracking pipes of twilight-time Sinatra than the comparatively colorless
crooning he did in the '40s.
It was during a dreamy and
enchanting version of "Embraceable You," that I suddenly realized something
about the peculiar dynamic of the show. There was electricity in the air, and in Sinatra's
demeanor, but it wasn't just the kind usually generated by the give-and-take between a
master performer and his rapturous, adoring audience. There I was, drifting along on
George Gershwin's lush melody, transported by Ira's equally luscious lyrics, when Sinatra
sang the wrong line. Instead of "I love all the many charms about you," he led
with the next line: "Above all, I want my arms about you." I was frozen in
suspense, wondering how he'd slip out of this lyrical corner he'd painted himself into.
OK, so the solution he came up with was less than inspired: he sang, "Above all, I
love the sound of you," but at least it featured the same rounded vowel sound,
and that counts for something.
Later on this mixture of empathy
and suspense "C'mon, Frank, you can make it!" came to the fore
when "Mack the Knife" got away from him completely. But he wasn't even
flustered. As Frank, Jr. vamped with the orchestra, Sinatra walked over to one of the
teleprompters and made a rolling motion with one arm: "Where the hell am I?" he
cracked. "Nope, that's not it," he said as he watched the words roll by. But
once he found his place he hit the ground running. Master showman that he was, he threw
himself into the rest of the song, selling the hell out of it as it built to a patented Bolero-like
Big Finish. Whereupon the audience went crazy and leapt to its feet.
This was by no means an obligatory
standing ovation we were reciprocating the genuine enthusiasm Sinatra had put into
his performance, maybe a little surprised that he still had any left in him. We were also
cheering him on and congratulating him not just on a job well done, but for
rebounding when the chips were down, not giving up, and giving it that extra surge of
energy as he approached the finale. For the umpteenth time, Sinatra pulled off the
impossible and finished in style. The world was his.
-30- |
 
Click here for a detailed look at Sinatra's 25 best albums
For a glimpse of Sinatra's darker side, visit
the Franksville
Hall of Shame
Tribute sidebar: Record overview:
"Four for the Road..."
The Official Death
Certificate:
It's hard to believe, but it's true...
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