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The Complete Capitol Singles Collection (4CD)

The Complete Capitol Singles Collection (4CD)
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Product Details
Artist : Frank Sinatra
Format : Best of, Box set, Original recording remastered
Binding : Audio CD
EAN : 0724383808922
Label : EMI Music Canada
Number of Discs : 4
Product Group : Music
Release Date : 1996-08-20
UPC : 724383808922
ASIN : B000002U51
Track Listings for
Disc-1
1. Lean Baby
2. I'm Walking Behind You
3. I've Got the World on a String
4. My One and Only Love
5. Anytime, Anywhere
6. From Here to Eternity
7. I Love You
8. South of the Border
9. Take a Chance
10. Young at Heart
11. Don't Worry 'Bout Me
12. I Could Have Told You
13. Rain (Falling from the Skies)
14. Three Coins in the Fountain
15. Gal That Got Away
16. Half as Lovely (Twice as True)
17. It Worries Me
18. When I Stop Loving You
19. White Christmas
20. Christmas Waltz
21. Someone to Watch Over Me
22. You, My Love
Disc-2
1. Melody of Love
2. I'm Gonna Live Till I Die
3. Why Should I Cry Over You?
4. Don't Change Your Mind About Me
5. Two Hearts, Two Kisses (Make One Love)
6. From the Bottom to the Top
7. If I Had Three Wishes
8. Learnin' the Blues
9. Not as a Stranger
10. How Could You Do a Thing Like That to Me
11. Same Old Saturday Night
12. Fairy Tale
13. Love and Marriage
14. Impatient Years
15. (Love Is) The Tender Trap
16. Weep They Will
17. You'll Get Yours
18. Flowers Mean Forgiveness
19. (How Little It Matters) How Little We Know
20. Five Hundred Guys
21. Wait for Me [Johnny Concho Theme]
22. You're Sensational
23. Well Did You Evah?
Disc-3
1. Mind If I Make Love to You?
2. Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
3. You Forgot All the Words (While I Still Remember the Tune)
4. Hey! Jealous Lover
5. Your Love for Me
6. Can I Steal a Little Love
7. So Long, My Love
8. Crazy Love
9. Something Wonderful Happens in Summer
10. You're Cheatin' Yourself (If You're Cheatin' on Me)
11. All the Way
12. Chicago
13. Witchcraft
14. Tell Her You Love Her
15. Christmas Waltz
16. Mistletoe and Holly
17. Nothing in Common
18. How Are Ya' Fixed for Love?
19. Same Old Song and Dance
20. Monique
21. Mr. Success
22. Sleep Warm
23. No One Ever Tells You
24. To Love and Be Loved
Disc-4
1. Time After Time
2. French Foreign Legion
3. All My Tomorrows
4. High Hopes
5. They Came to Cordura
6. Talk to Me
7. River, Stay 'Way from My Door
8. It's Over, It's Over, It's Over
9. This Was My Love
10. Nice 'n' Easy
11. You'll Always Be the One I Love
12. Ol' MacDonald
13. My Blue Heaven
14. Sentimental Baby
15. Sentimental Journey
16. American Beauty Rose
17. Moon Was Yellow
18. I've Heard That Song Before
19. Five Minutes More
20. I'll Remember April
21. I Love Paris
22. Hidden Persuasion
23. Ya Better Stop [#][*]
24. Sea Song [#][*]
25. Look to Your Heart [*]
26. I Believe [*]
27. Love Looks So Well on You [*]
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.com

Each song on this 96-cut collection is wonderful. And the Capitol years were when Sinatra's fullest voice was used on material by the best (Arlen, Porter, Van Heusen, Cahn, Styne). But a purist will miss the narrative that was so special in the original albums. Records such as This is Sinatra, Songs for Swingin' Lovers, and Only the Lonely were among the first concept albums in pop music. If you're used to hearing "Three Coins in the Fountain" after "I've Got the World on a String," this relatively random cornucopia--though full of great music--will not leave you feeling as satisfied as the old LPs. This is a fine primer for newcomers, but you should't miss the tracks that never became singles, including such classics as "Pennies From Heaven" and "Old Devil Moon." --Karen Croft
Customer Reviews
Phenomenal Frank Collection- Includes some great rarities (2001-12-04)
5
The trouble with buying Mr. Sinatra's recordings is that many overlap between the original vinyl now on CD,and other more lenghty collections. That's why this 4-disc CAPITOL collection is so good.There are some swingers and ballads here that to me at least,a die hard fan,were unknown before hearing them here.True, a few are not top drawer Frank,but there are many peak performances here with Frank,and usually,Nelson Riddle.These include "My One and Only Love",which I admit I almost disliked on first listening.Now it is among my all-time favorite Frank ballads.Listen to this wondrous love song,and you'll know why Frank helped make a better world with so many tunes.The same is true with "You My Love","Look to your Heart","Tell Her You Love Her" (a slightly faster tempo),"Time After Time",and "This Was My Love".Any young couple who can sing these songs together (try karaoke?!) should head right to the altar,and will probably live happily ever after. (Except for "This Was My Love",actually a sad number).For swingers try "Mr. Success",a real blaster with lyrics Frank may have helped write.The same holds for the practically unknown "Ya Better Stop",an arrangement full of fun,wit,and brassy horns,even ending on the singer's amusing fade out comments.Duets like "Who Wants to be a Millionaire",and "Well did you evah" with Mr. Crosby are just a few more of the fun numbers balancing this collection. As in any large assortment,there are a few near-misses,including a goofy "Sea Song",a 1950's version of turn of the century vaudeville (smaltz?!)But a few near misses don't take away from the fact that there must be at least 50 smashes on here,many difficult to find anywhere else.Bottom Line: This a great collection of Frank,unique from many others,and will never go out of style,and is worth the investment several times over...Listening to Frank's best 1950's recordings put the lie to the common smug comments that the 50's were dull,bland,etc...
"Songs For Swingin" Singles" (2001-11-06)
5
Many fans and music critics seem to agree that Frank Sinatra's years with Capitol (1953-61) represent the zenith of his recording career.

Sinatra's Capitol output divided itself nicely into two distinct entities: the legendary albums (Only The Lonely, Songs For Swingin Lovers, Come Fly With Me et al) and the quick 2 and a half to 3 minute shots at hitting the top 40.

While Sinatra oversaw every aspect of his albums, he had a staff of song pluggers and Capitol A&R men helping to choose the singles material.

The quality of the singles varied greatly-- from the ultra hip "Witchcraft," to the seductive "Talk To Me" right through Frank's only (thank goodness) attempt at the rock market:"Two Hearts--Two Kisses"

In this sensational box set, Capitol has issued every commercial Capitol single recorded by Sinatra over a 7 year span.

Though the quality of the material varies, Sinatra's performances remain uniformly superb....he sings "Ol Mac Donald" with the same energy and conviction as he demonstates on "Witchcraft" and "Nice N Easy."

Though he occasionally experimented with different arrangers for his singles output, the vast majority of the material was arranged by the twin geniuses: Billy May and Nelson Riddle.

Capitol has outdone itself with his box...the mastering of the original material is superb and the booklet by Will Friedwald (from whom I lifted the title of this review) is filled with sensational anecdotes and some hip inside references.

Owning this package and the Complete Reprise Studio Recordings from Warner Brothers is like having a Mercedes and a Rolls in the same garage.

The man was the finest popular singer of our time.

Getting Caught In The Rain (2001-07-06)
5
This is a great set! And I usually don't use exclamation points. Each song (even the cooly awkward rock and roll songs) hit me in the gut. It's like getting caught in a cold rain at midnight, downtown in a big city, and you look at the calender in a store-window and you see that you're somewhere in the 1950's. You pull up your collar and you think of the girl you lost, and have no hope of ever having again. You remember the great times, the not so great times, but you know it's a romance you'll remember all your life. Like Frank's voice. Get this, and be Human. Even Kerouac loved this guy. What better recommendation is that. This set is a hurricane!
Getting Caught In The Rain (2001-07-06)
5
This is a great set! And I usually don't use exclamation points. Each song (even the cooly awkward rock and roll songs) hit me in the gut. It's like getting caught in a cold rain at midnight, downtown in a big city, and you look at the calender in a store-window and you see that you're somewhere in the 1950's. You pull up your collar and you think of the girl you lost, and have no hope of ever having again. You remember the great times, the not so great times, but you know it's a romance you'll remember all your life. Like Frank's voice. Get this, and be Human. Even Kerouac loved this guy. What better recommendation is that. This set is a hurricane!
Fabulous singles from "The Hat" years . . . (2001-05-22)
5
Sinatra never was the top-selling singles artist that Bing, the Beatles, and Elvis were. He only had one number one hit at Capitol-- "Learnin' The Blues." His label mate Nat King Cole was probably a better singles artist, while Sinatra was the king of "concept" albums. The dozen or so LPs Frank recorded at Capitol are the greatest achievement in all of popular music, in my estimation. Even so, Frank made a lot of great singles, and it's wonderful to have them so lovingly collected here. One likes to hear the albums entire, by themselves, and the singles separately, so this box set is highly preferable to "The Capitol Years," which includes a mix of singles and songs from the albums. Some of these singles Sinatra loved and would sing over and over again throughout his career, including such hits as "Young At Heart," "Nice 'N Easy," the Cahn/Van Heusen masterpiece "All The Way", "Chicago," "Witchcraft" and "Three Coins In The Fountain." Those are the biggies. Then there are the lesser known gems, like "Rain" (with Riddle's rainy arrangement beating the time of windshield wipers as the raindrop sound effects pitter and patter), "Fairy Tale" (an obvious sequel to "Young At Heart" ravishingly and innocently sung by Frank), "To Love And Be Loved," and "Time After Time." A few of the songs were Frank's attempt (or at least his label's attempt) to get into the youth market, like the rock and roll numbers "Two Hearts, Two Kisses" and "From The Bottom To The Top." Most of these work pretty well, even when the material is pretty thin, as in the song Frank loathed, "Hey, Jealous Lover!" and such sappy things as "Flowers Mean Forgiveness" and "If I Had Three Wishes." The fact is, these songs are every bit as decent as most Nat, Bing, and Perry hits, only we expect more greatness from Frank, and wish he would stick to the Cole Porter and Gershwin standards. But the only bad song in the whole set-- in fact the only bad song Frank recorded at Capitol-- is "The Sea Song," which is corny beyond belief. Otherwise, it's a pleasure to hear Sinatra in his prime (he's in perfect voice on every track) swinging such fun numbers as "I'm Gonna Live Till I Die" and "You'll Get Yours" and dutifully caressing the title songs to movies like "Not As A Stranger" and "They Came to Cordura." Nelson Riddle arranged most of these songs, and, as Will Friedwald points out in his Grammy winning liner notes, the great arranger experimented a bit more with his charts in the singles than on the albums. We have more choirs, more Latin sounds, even an Hawaiian guitar. The first two tracks were arranged by Sinatra's great partner of the Columbia period, Axel Stordahl, although "Lean Baby" is anything but a sweet and string-laden ballad! Anorexic fans might want to take note, but if you really want to get off to a swinging start, go straight to the recording that kicked off the remarkable Sinatra-Riddle partnership, the number that embodies everything that made them great-- "I've Got The World On A String." That's the true beginning of Sinatra Act II, when he donned the fedora, tilted it to the side, and gave us the greatest pop music the world has ever heard.
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