In the Wee Small Hours

In the Wee Small Hours

Frank Sinatra
Year 1955
Label Capitol Records W 581
Genre Pop|Standards
Pop Standards Vocal Jazz

Tracklist 16 tracks

#
Title
Rating
Plays
1.
Can't We Be Friends
2
-
2.
Dancing On the Ceiling
2
-
3.
Deep in a Dream
2
-
4.
Glad to Be Unhappy
4
-
5.
I Get Along Without You Very Well
4
-
6.
I See Your Face Before Me
2
-
7.
I'll Be Around
2
-
8.
I'll Never Be the Same
2
-
9.
Ill Wind
2
-
10.
In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
4
-
11.
It Never Entered My Mind
2
-
12.
Last Night When We Were Young
2
-
13.
Mood Indigo
2
-
14.
This Love of Mine
2
-
15.
What Is This Thing Called Love
4
-
16.
When Your Lover Has Gone
2
-

📖 About this album

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In the Wee Small Hours is an album by Frank Sinatra with arrangements by Nelson Riddle, released in 1955. It is with this album that Sinatra perfected the concept album, fully realizing the ideas he had been grappling with in record presentation going all the way back to The Voice from 1946. It remains one of the most celebrated and enduring concept albums that Sinatra put out during the 1950s. By the time Frank Sinatra recorded In the Wee Small Hours, he witnessed the end of several relationships. He and his first wife, Nancy Barbato, separated on Valentine's Day 1950. Read more on Last.fm.
Read more
In the Wee Small Hours is an album by Frank Sinatra with arrangements by Nelson Riddle, released in 1955. It is with this album that Sinatra perfected the concept album, fully realizing the ideas he had been grappling with in record presentation going all the way back to The Voice from 1946. It remains one of the most celebrated and enduring concept albums that Sinatra put out during the 1950s. By the time Frank Sinatra recorded In the Wee Small Hours, he witnessed the end of several relationships. He and his first wife, Nancy Barbato, separated on Valentine's Day 1950. While still married, he began a relationship with Ava Gardner. After he and Barbato divorced in October 1951, he married Gardner ten days later. But they were both jealous of the other's extramarital affairs. The relationship deteriorated during the recording of Songs for Young Lovers. Gardner left Sinatra two months after the release of From Here to Eternity, divorcing in 1957. She said, "We don't have the ability to live together like any normal married couple."It is assumed that this album's grouping of "love gone bad" songs, and Sinatra's poignant renderings, were a direct result of Sinatra's failing relationship with Gardner, to the point that these are called "Ava Songs". Riddle credited Sinatra's loss of Gardner with his ability to sing the type of songs contained in this album. The failure of this relationship did not shatter Sinatra but instead caused him to sing more emotionally. In the midst of these personal disturbances, Sinatra began selecting songs for a new album. He would rehearse each one of them reiteratively at home with Bill Miller, his pianist. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
1001 albums you must hear before you die jazz vocal jazz 1955 50s

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