The Capitol Years

~ Release by Frank Sinatra (see all versions of this release, 3 available)

Tracklist

112" Vinyl
212" Vinyl
312" Vinyl
#TitleRatingLength
E1I Got Plenty of Nothing
recording of:
I Got Plenty o’ Nuttin’ (Porgy and Bess, catch-all for jazz & pop arrangements) (on 1956-11-15)
lyricist:
Ira Gershwin and DuBose Heyward
composer:
George Gershwin (composer)
publisher:
Dubose and Dorothy Heyward Memorial Fund Publishing, Frankie G. Songs, Nokawi Music and Gershwin Publishing Corp (in 1935)
is based on:
Porgy and Bess: Act II, Scene I. “Oh, I got plenty o’nuttin’”
3:15
E2I Wish I Were in Love Again
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Wilbur Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
cello:
Cy Bernard, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (75- US saxophonist, the nephew)
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin, Marshall Sosson and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-20)
cover recording of:
I Wish I Were in Love Again (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell Music (UK)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
recording of:
I Wish I Were in Love Again (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell Music (UK)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
12:29
E3The Lady Is a Tramp
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
lead vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1956-11-26)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1956-11-26)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1956-11-26)
arranger and orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
The Lady Is a Tramp (from “Babes in Arms”) (on 1956-11-26)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA) and Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
part of:
Pal Joey
43:16
E4Night and Day
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-26)
recording of:
Night and Day (Cole Porter; from “The Gay Divorce”) (on 1956-11-26)
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1932)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA), Chappell Music Ltd., Warner Bros. (holding: file NO releases), Warner Bros. Music (publisher; do NOT use as release label), Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!), Warner Bros., Inc. (Warner Bros. Music Division), Warner/Chappell (Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.), WB Music Corp. (1929–2019) (until 2019-05-28) and Harms, Inc. (on 1932-11-18)
part of:
Gay Divorce
24:00
E5The Lonesome Road13:55
E6If I Had You
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
If I Had You (jazz standard) (on 1956-11-26)
writer:
James Campbell (British songwriter and music publisher), Reginald Connelly and Ted Shapiro
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Campbell Connelly Inc. (ASCAP affiliated), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP) and Robbins Music Corp.
recording of:
If I Had You (jazz standard) (on 1956-11-26)
writer:
James Campbell (British songwriter and music publisher), Reginald Connelly and Ted Shapiro
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Campbell Connelly Inc. (ASCAP affiliated), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP) and Robbins Music Corp.
12:36
E7Where Are You33:30
F1I'm a Fool to Want You24:51
F2Witchcraft
producer:
Dave Cavanaugh
bass:
Joe Comfort (on 1957-05-20)
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone) (on 1957-05-20)
cello:
Cy Bernard (on 1957-05-20), Edgar Lustgarten (on 1957-05-20) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller) (on 1957-05-20)
drums (drum set):
Frank DeVito (american jazz drummer) (on 1957-05-20)
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist) (on 1957-05-20)
harp:
Kathryn Julye (on 1957-05-20)
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist) (on 1957-05-20)
reeds:
Buddy Collette (on 1957-05-20), Harry Klee (on 1957-05-20), Joe Koch (on 1957-05-20), Wilbur Schwartz (on 1957-05-20) and Warren Webbe (on 1957-05-20)
trombone:
Jim Priddy (on 1957-05-20), Dick Noel (trombone) (on 1957-05-20) and Juan Tizol (on 1957-05-20)
trumpet:
Clarence "Shorty" Sherock (on 1957-05-20), Harry “Sweets” Edison (on 1957-05-20), Conrad Gozzo (on 1957-05-20) and Vito "Mickey" Mangano (on 1957-05-20)
viola:
Maxine Johnson (on 1957-05-20) and Barbara Simons (on 1957-05-20)
violin:
Alex Beller (on 1957-05-20), Harry Bluestone (on 1957-05-20), Robert Cross (violinist) (on 1957-05-20), Walter Edelstein (on 1957-05-20), Ben Gill (on 1957-05-20), Paul Nero (composer & jazz violinist; Born: Kurt Polnariov/Polnarioff) (on 1957-05-20), Mischa Russell (violinist) (on 1957-05-20), Marshall Sosson (on 1957-05-20) and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor) (on 1957-05-20)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-05-20)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1957-05-20)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1957-05-20)
arranger:
Nelson Riddle
publisher:
Morley Music Corp. and Notable Music Co., Inc.
recording of:
Witchcraft (on 1957-05-20)
lyricist:
Carolyn Leigh
composer:
Cy Coleman
publisher:
Morley Music Co. Inc., Notable Music, Sony/ATV Songs LLC and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019)
12:54
F3Something Wonderful Happens in Summer
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-05-20)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1957-05-20)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1957-05-20)
recording of:
Something Wonderful Happens in Summer (on 1957-05-20)
writer:
Joe Bushkin and John DeVries
publisher:
Sands Music Corp.
3:15
F4All the Way
producer:
Dave Cavanaugh
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-08-13)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1957-08-13)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1957-08-13)
arranger:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1957-08-13)
recording of:
All the Way (from “The Joker Is Wild”) (on 1957-08-13)
lyricist:
Sammy Cahn
composer:
Jimmy Van Heusen
publisher:
Barton Music Corporation OBO Maraville Music Corp, Maraville Music Corp., The International Music Network and Universal Music Corp. OBO Van Heusen Music Corp. (USA, affiliated with ASCAP)
sub-publisher:
フジパシフィックミュージック (Fujipacific Music, Inc.)
part of:
The 30th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1) and Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 1957 winner)
2.52:53
F5Chicago
recorded in:
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1957-08-13)
producer:
Dave Cavanaugh, Voyle Gilmore and Bill Miller (US producer at Capitol Records)
cello:
Cy Bernard, Armand Kaproff and Edgar Lustgarten
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Al Viola
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
saxophone and woodwind:
Skeets Herfurt, Harry Klee, Joe Koch, Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other) and Champ Webb
trombone:
Russell Brown (Swing trombonist), Pullman “Tommy” Pederson and Jimmy Priddy
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Conrad Gozzo and George Seaberg
valve trombone:
Juan Tizol
viola:
Maxine Johnson and Barbara Simons
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harry Bluestone, Jacques Gasselin, Dan Lube, Paul Nero (composer & jazz violinist; Born: Kurt Polnariov/Polnarioff), Erno Neufeld, Mischa Russell (violinist) and Marshall Sosson
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-08-13)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1957-08-13)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1957-08-13)
arranger:
Nelson Riddle
recording of:
Chicago (That Toddlin’ Town) (on 1957-08-13)
lyricist and composer:
Fred Fisher (in 1922)
publisher:
Fisher Music Corp. and Salabert
32:13
F6Let's Get Away From It All
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
double bass:
Joe Mondragon
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Al Hendrickson
harp:
Verlye Mills
percussion:
Frank Flynn
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
trombone:
Joe Howard (american trombone player), Murray McEachern, Pullman “Tommy” Pederson and Si Zentner
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Conrad Gozzo, Manny Klein and Shorty Sherock
tuba:
J.H. Washburne
woodwind:
Buddy Collette, Fred Falensby, Skeets Herfurt, Jules Jacob (US jazz woodwind player) and Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-10-01)
orchestra:
The Billy May Orchestra (on 1957-10-01)
conductor:
Billy May (on 1957-10-01)
arranger:
Billy May
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1957-10-01)
cover recording of:
Let’s Get Away From It All (on 1957-10-01)
lyricist:
Tom Adair
composer:
Matt Dennis (American singer, pianist, band leader)
publisher:
Dorsey Brothers Music
recording of:
Let’s Get Away From It All
lyricist:
Tom Adair
composer:
Matt Dennis (American singer, pianist, band leader)
publisher:
Dorsey Brothers Music
2.52:10
F7Autumn in New York
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
cello:
Armand Kaproff, Ray Kramer, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Mondragon
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
French horn:
Vincent DeRosa
guitar:
Al Hendrickson
harp:
Verlye Mills
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
trombone:
Joe Howard (american trombone player), Murray McEachern and Si Zentner
tuba:
Joe Washburne
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Alexander Neiman (violist), Paul Robyn and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Harold Dicterow, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Dan Lube, Alex Murray (violinist), Paul Nero (composer & jazz violinist; Born: Kurt Polnariov/Polnarioff), Lou Raderman, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin, Marshall Sosson and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor)
woodwind:
Fred Falensby, Skeets Herfurt, Jules Jacob (US jazz woodwind player), Jules Kinsler and Wilbur Schwartz
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-10-03)
orchestra:
The Billy May Orchestra (on 1957-10-03)
conductor:
Billy May (on 1957-10-03)
arranger:
Billy May
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1957-10-03)
recording of:
Autumn in New York (1934) (on 1957-10-03)
lyricist and composer:
Vernon Duke
publisher:
Chappell & Co. and Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!)
44:36
F8Come Fly With Me
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
cello:
Elizabeth Greenschpoon, Armand Kaproff, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Mondragon
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Al Hendrickson
harp:
Verlye Mills
percussion:
Frank Flynn
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
trombone:
Joe Howard (american trombone player), Ed Kusby, Murray McEachern and Si Zentner
trumpet:
Conrad Gozzo, Manny Klein, Vito N. Mangano and Shorty Sherock
tuba:
Joe Washburne
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Alexander Neiman (violist), Paul Robyn and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Harold Dicterow, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Ben Gill, Dan Lube, Alex Murray (violinist), Paul Nero (composer & jazz violinist; Born: Kurt Polnariov/Polnarioff), Lou Raderman, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin and Marshall Sosson
woodwind:
Buddy Collette, Fred Falensby, Jules Jacob (US jazz woodwind player), Harry Klee and Wilbur Schwartz
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1957-10-08)
orchestra:
The Billy May Orchestra (on 1957-10-08)
conductor:
Billy May (on 1957-10-08)
arranger:
Billy May
recorded at:
Capitol Studios, Studio A in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1957-10-08)
recording of:
Come Fly With Me (on 1957-10-08)
lyricist:
Sammy Cahn (in 1957)
composer:
Jimmy Van Heusen (in 1957)
publisher:
Cahn Music Company, Maraville Music Corp., PW Arrangements, The International Music Network, Universal Music Corp. (USA, affiliated with ASCAP), Van Heusen Music Corp. and WB Music Corp. (1929–2019) (until 2019-05-28)
sub-publisher:
Sony Music Publishing (Japan) Inc. (song publisher, never a release label), Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996) and フジパシフィックミュージック (Fujipacific Music, Inc.)
4.653:18
412" Vinyl
512" Vinyl