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In The Wee Small Hours

Frank Sinatra

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Album Review

Expanding on the concept of Songs for Young Lovers!, In the Wee Small Hours was a collection of ballads arranged by Nelson Riddle. The first 12" album recorded by Sinatra, Wee Small Hours was more focused and concentrated than his two earlier concept records. It's a blue, melancholy album, built around a spare rhythm section featuring a rhythm guitar, celesta, and Bill Miller's piano, with gently aching strings added every once and a while. Within that melancholy mood is one of Sinatra's most jazz-oriented performances — he restructures the melody and Miller's playing is bold throughout the record. Where Songs for Young Lovers! emphasized the romantic aspects of the songs, Sinatra sounds like a lonely, broken man on In the Wee Small Hours. Beginning with the newly written title song, the singer goes through a series of standards that are lonely and desolate. In many ways, the album is a personal reflection of the heartbreak of his doomed love affair with actress Ava Gardner, and the standards that he sings form their own story when collected together. Sinatra's voice had deepened and worn to the point where his delivery seems ravished and heartfelt, as if he were living the songs.

Customer Reviews

Sinatra's personal favourite

Frank Sinatra has said this was his most satisfying thus favourite recording. The term "concept album" wasn't around in 1954, but this is what it is. Frank assumed full control over his albums right from the choice of song, their arrangements, then the track order right to the album cover art. These tracks tell a story in their sequence. Nelson Riddle's arrangements are superbly sung. My favourites are the title song, "Can't we be friends", "Dancing on the ceiling", "What is this thing called love?" (he always sang Cole Porter tunes so well) and the CD bonus track which didn't make it to the original LP, "Last night when we were young", one of the most poignant songs about the loss of innocence. This album is a must for those who seek a representative example of Frank Sinatra's best ballad singing.

Biography

Born: 12 December 1915 in Hoboken, NJ

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s

Frank Sinatra was arguably the most important popular music figure of the 20th century, his only real rivals for the title being Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, and the Beatles. In a professional career that lasted 60 years, he demonstrated a remarkable ability to maintain his appeal and pursue his musical goals despite often countervailing trends. He came to the fore during the swing era of the 1930s and '40s, helped to define the "sing era" of the '40s and '50s, and continued to attract listeners during...
Full Bio

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