Track Listing 1. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning 2. Mood Indigo 3. Glad to Be Unhappy 4. I Get Along Without You Very Well 5. Deep in a Dream 6. I See Your Face Before Me 7. Cant We Be Friends 8. When Your Lover Has Gone 9. What Is This Thing Called Love 10. Last Night When We Were Young 11. Il Be Around 12. Ill Wind 13. It Never Entered My Mind 14. Dancing on the Ceiling 15. Ill Never Be the Same 16. This Love of Mine
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Nelson Riddle | | Distributor: | Phantom Import Distributi | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Originally issued on CD without the song "Last Night When We Were Young." Personnel includes: Frank Sinatra (vocals); Nelson Riddle (arranger). Includes liner notes by Pete Welding. Digitally remastered by Larry Walsh (Capitol Recording Studios). Japanese 20-bit remastered reissue. Recorded in 1955, this superbly arranged and sung set of slow ballads can lay claim to being the world's first "concept album." Of course, in classical music, song cycles had been around since Schubert, but a whole set of pop tunes arranged around a central theme or mood was something new in popular music. With the advent of the LP in 1953, commercial pop music was beginning to take itself seriously. As to be expected, Frank Sinatra did it first and best. Sinatra is in utter command of this material--vocally relaxed yet focused on conveying what these hand-picked "torch" songs still have to say to the modern listener. Throughout he projects his signature manly vulnerability without seeming maudlin or even sentimental. The singer is helped immeasurably in this task by Nelson Riddle's deftly scored chamber arrangements which include brilliant use of celeste and guitar on several tracks (cf. Alec Wilder's "I'll Be Around", Kay Swift's "Can't We Be Friends".) A must for any listener even remotely interested in the Great American Songbook.
Editorial Reviews Ranked #7 in The NME Top 30 Heartbreak Albums - ...Smokey, bleak and at times desolate, it is easy to trace the line back to Billie Holiday....His voice has rarely had such devastating effect. NME (08/12/2000)
The most indispensable Sinatra item. A collection of songs about unrequited love, not merely sung but lived out by a performer seemingly intent on sharing his own heartbreak with the world... Mojo (02/01/2001)
Ranked #100 in Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time - [The album] sustains a midnight mood of loneliness and lost love - it's a prototypical concept album. Rolling Stone (12/11/2003)
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