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Frank Sinatra - Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonelyh1
Jazz / Pop
Performer: Frank Sinatra
Title: Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely
Style: Vocal
Year 1958
Country US
Genre: Jazz / Pop
Rating: 4.8
Votes: 293
MP3 size: 1100 mb
FLAC size: 1624 mb
WMA size: 1976 mb
Other formats: AHX ADX AAC FLAC XM WMA AC3

Frank Sinatra - Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely mp3 album


Frank Sinatra - Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely mp3 album

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Only The Lonely
Written-By – S. Kahn-J. Van Heusen*
A2 Angel Eyes
Written-By – E. Brent*, M. Dennis*
A3 What's New
Written-By – B. Haggart*, J. Burke*
A4 It's A Lonesome Old Town
Written-By – Charles Kisco, Harry Tobias
A5 Willow Weep For Me
Written-By – Ann Ronnell*
A6 Good-Bye
Written-By – Gordon Jenkins
B1 Blues In The Night
Written-By – H. Arlen-J. Mercer*
B2 Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry
Written-By – S. Cahn-J. Styne*
B3 Ebb Tide
Written-By – C. Sigman*, R. Maxwell*
B4 Spring Is Here
Written-By – R. Rodgers-L. Hart*
B5 Gone With The Wind
Written-By – A. Wrubel*, H. Magidson*
B6 One For My Baby
Written-By – H. Arlen-J. Mercer*

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – Capitol Records, Inc.
  • Pressed By – Capitol Records Pressing Plant, Los Angeles

Credits

  • Conductor – Nelson Riddle

Notes

First issue, labels are black with color band around outer-edge and a silver Capitol logo on the left-side of the labels.
This version also has, "Long Playing High Fidelity", written vertically on the label.
"✲" in runout denotes a Capitol Records Pressing Plant, Los Angeles pressing. A Scranton pressing exists here: Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Runouts Both Sides, Stamped): ✲

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
SW1053 Frank Sinatra Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely ‎(LP, Album) Capitol Records SW1053 US 1959
SW 1053, SW-1053 Frank Sinatra Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely ‎(LP, Album, RE) Capitol Records, Capitol Records SW 1053, SW-1053 US 1962
7243 4 94756 2 5 Frank Sinatra Only The Lonely ‎(CD, Album, RM) Capitol Records 7243 4 94756 2 5 Canada 1998
SM-501053 Frank Sinatra Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely ‎(LP, Album, Club, RE) Capitol Records SM-501053 Canada 1975
7243 4 94756 2 5 Frank Sinatra Only The Lonely ‎(CD, Album, RM) Capitol Records 7243 4 94756 2 5 US 1998
Sharpbringer
Spot on ratskins. I thought it was some sort of "special" new cover for the new deluxe release, then discovered that's how it was originally!!Truly weird...
Gann
Sinatra's "goth" album. A real treat for depressives and introverts.
Rleillin
Along with "In The Wee Small Hours Of the Morning", this Sinatra lp is again a bit of a concept album. Sinatra lost in a thick romantic fog. This is Sinatra as saloon singer, to my ear, his best pose. If a man could fake sincerity, Sinatra is the man (much like Jagger fakes anarchy).There's some real anxiousness and bitterness here. The often overlooked "Angel Eyes" sees Frankie as some sort of phantom, seeking his Angel Eyes. "'Scuze me while I disappear..." This is a man love sick.Melancholy seems to hang around this recording. In lesser hands, a song like "Willow Weep For Me" would be trite, but Sinatra turns it into a personal statement, much as the isolation of "It's A Lonesome Old Town" and the old chestnut "Blues in the Night" is truly a cynical work in the hands of Frank.The title track sets the somber mood, and I prefer "Only the Lonely" to "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" because the music is more interesting.But the real gem of the album is Frankie's version of "One For My Baby", which is a perfect song to my ear. Much like Sinatra's version of Porter's "Night and Day". They seem flawless, and many of these songs are as sincere as Frankie gets. This from a guy who could fake it quite well if he wanted to.The Capitol years were Sinatra's most productive. Like his successor, Elvis Presley, Frankie sang way too many songs. We didn't need Frank's Beatle impression: "There's something in the way that chick moves...." His comeback in the fifties really starts the Sinatra legend going full tilt. This album, along with "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" are Frankie at his artistic peak.