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The V-Discs: Columbia Years: 1943-45

The V-Discs: Columbia Years: 1943-45
 

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Frank Sinatra

The V-Discs: Columbia Years: 1943-45

 
Cover The V-Discs: Columbia Years: 1943-45 click the image to get it in cd-cover size
Release Date:
Label: Sony
Rating: 5.0
 
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Tracklist of The V-Discs: Columbia Years: 1943-45

Disc 1
1 I Only Have Eyes for You  3:29 no lyrics yet - submit it
2 Kiss Me Again [#]  2:41 no lyrics yet - submit it
3 (There'll Be A) Hot Time in the Town of Berlin (When the Yanks Go March   no lyrics yet - submit it
4 Music Stopped  2:59 no lyrics yet - submit it
5 I Couldn't Sleep a Wink Last Night [#]  3:25 no lyrics yet - submit it
6 Way You Look Tonight [#]  3:23 view lyrics
7 I'll Be Around [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
8 You've Got a Hold on Me [#]  2:32 no lyrics yet - submit it
9 Lovely Way to Spend an Evening [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
10 She's Funny That Way   no lyrics yet - submit it
11 Speak Low [#]  2:24 no lyrics yet - submit it
12 Close to You [#]  2:36 no lyrics yet - submit it
13 My Shining Hour [#]  3:26 no lyrics yet - submit it
14 Long Ago (And Far Away) [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
15 Some Other Time [#]  2:36 no lyrics yet - submit it
16 Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
17 Put Your Dreams Away (For Another Day)  3:09 no lyrics yet - submit it
18 And Then You Kissed Me [#]   view lyrics
19 All the Things You Are  3:03 view lyrics
20 All of Me [#]  2:08 view lyrics
21 Nancy (With the Laughing Face)  3:25 no lyrics yet - submit it
22 Mighty Like a Rose   no lyrics yet - submit it
23 Falling in Love With Love  1:52 no lyrics yet - submit it
24 Cradle Song [Version 1]   no lyrics yet - submit it
25 I'll Follow My Secret Heart [#]  3:17 no lyrics yet - submit it
26 There's No You  3:58 no lyrics yet - submit it
27 Someone to Watch over Me  3:25 no lyrics yet - submit it
28 Let Me Love You Tonight [#]  2:42 no lyrics yet - submit it
29 Just Close Your Eyes [#]  1:38 no lyrics yet - submit it
30 If You Are But a Dream [#]  3:06 no lyrics yet - submit it
31 Strange Music [#]  3:16 no lyrics yet - submit it
33 Dick Haymes, Dick Todd and Como [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
34 None But the Lonely Heart  3:42 no lyrics yet - submit it
35 Ol' Man River  4:03 no lyrics yet - submit it
36 Homesick, That's All  3:14 no lyrics yet - submit it
37 Night Is Young and You're So Beautiful   no lyrics yet - submit it
38 Aren't You Glad You're You [#]  2:08 view lyrics
39 You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me [#]  2:40 no lyrics yet - submit it
40 I'll Never Smile Again  3:10 no lyrics yet - submit it
41 Without a Song  4:30 no lyrics yet - submit it
42 When Was the Last Time I Saw You (The Last Time) [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
43 Don't Forget Tonight Tomorrow [#]   no lyrics yet - submit it
44 Oh! What It Seemed to Be  3:27 no lyrics yet - submit it
45 Over the Rainbow  3:20 no lyrics yet - submit it
46 Oh Bess, Oh Where's My Bess?   no lyrics yet - submit it
47 My Romance  3:18 no lyrics yet - submit it
48 Song Is You  3:18 no lyrics yet - submit it
49 I Fall in Love With You Every Day   no lyrics yet - submit it
50 They Say It's Wonderful  3:10 no lyrics yet - submit it
51 You Are Too Beautiful  2:54 no lyrics yet - submit it
52 Come Rain or Come Shine [#]  4:06 no lyrics yet - submit it
53 Stormy Weather  4:16 no lyrics yet - submit it

Reviews:

Great Great Music

I am one of a very few who do not particularly care for Sinatra's work with Columbia, Reprise and such. My favorite Sinatra is the music he made with The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra from 1940 - 1942 (See "The Song is You" boxed set). I also love the first recordings that Frank made in 1939 with The Harry James Orchestra (also available on disc). However, the material on this cd is beautiful. It is a wonderful bridge between Frank with Tommy Dorsey and the Frank Sinatra that is mostly played on radio. This collection is obviously historic for it features songs that Frank would never record again (with the exception of one or two). It is also historic in the fact that these recordings were not meant for the public. They were part of special albums that were shipped to our service men and women overseas, so, for the first time in over 50 years these recordings are for public consumption. I would advise any Sinatra fan -- casual or serious -- or any collector of war era music to get this collection.

Surprise: this is essential!

A collection of the fifty or so V-disc recordings Sinatra made at Columbia Records doesn't seem like it should be at the top of anyone's list. But look again! This two disc set actually fills in a major gap in Sinatra's career. You see, when Frankie went solo, and left Tommy Dorsey's band, the American Federation of Musicians was on strike. So even though Sinatra had a contract with Columbia, he really couldn't record anything for almost a year-- until the middle of 1944. He did record nine songs with an a cappella choir, but these Stordahl-less attempts aren't his best stuff. And, at the time, Sinatra's voice was in peak form. So it's a thrill to hear him on these V-disc recordings, where he was allowed to use strings. That means we get the definitive treatment of classics like "I Couldn't Sleep A Wink Last Night" and "A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening," both from the movie "Higher and Higher." And, at last, we hear the young Sinatra with gorgeous strings on "Close To You," the first song he recorded commercially for Columbia. We also hear songs Sinatra did not record commercially for Columbia: "There'll Be A Hot Time In The Town Of Berlin" (written for Frank, but "stolen" by Bing when Decca settled with the striking musicians first), a sweet and slow version of "The Way You Look Tonight" (which he would later swing with Riddle at Reprise), Johnny Mercer's "My Shining Hour" (not revisited until 1979), and "Come Rain Or Come Shine" (which Sinatra and Costa would put the definitive stamp on in 1961). And we find some amazing treasures in the songs Frank *never* recorded commercially-- "Speak Low," a haunting, lovely tune, "Some Other Time," "Long Ago and Far Away," "And Then You Kissed Me," "You've Got A Hold On Me." These are all first-rate ballads, and Sinatra's voice was never so deliciously smooth and beautiful. Some of the tracks fade out a little soon, because they're taken from live airchecks, and quite a few only last a minute or so. But that's really not a problem. In addition to these stunning ballads, we hear some fun up-tempo numbers like "Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are" (Frank never sounded so cute), Bing's "Aren't You Glad You're You" (that almost beats out the Old Groaner!) and a parody of "Sunday, Monday or Always" where Sinatra pokes fun at Bing, Perry Como, Dick Haymes and a forgotten crooner named Dick Todd. Funny stuff (of Bing, Frank says, "I'll grant that he's got voice, if he grants that I've got hair"). Bob Hope introduces Frank on one track, and Sinatra talks to the soldiers at the beginning and in other places. So it's a relaxed, nostalgic journey-- with a great essay by Will Friedwald and plenty of excellent photos. To hear the young Sinatra at his best, grab this fabulous box!

V as in "Voice"

Sinatra still has detractors who, whatever their actual reasons, choose to impugn his vocal quality. But more disturbing are the Sinatra defenders who casually accept and dismiss criticisms of the voice, insisting that phrasing and emotion are what count. In a way, they're right, but the sum effect is regrettable if Old Blue's singing comes to be seen as all about "attitude" rather than vocal production.

If any one has doubts about the quality of his instrument, listen to "If You Are But a Dream"--or better yet, "Where Is My Bess." Both are all-out, impassioned performances in which nothing can be held back or covered up. The musical weight is entirely on the quality of that "bel canto" voice and the forcefulness of its underlying breath stream. Even Caruso and Pavarotti would have to stand back.