By the time of the "British Invasion", the musical times had drastically changed for Frank Sinatra and a lot of major US stars. Sinatra, however, had by then long been acquainted with the vagaries of commercial taste in popular music.
Sinatra's "Strangers in the Night" became - on May 28, 1966 - his first #1 hit since "Learning the Blues" from 1955 and also his best-selling single ever. The single received a Grammy for "Best Male Pop Vocal Performance" whilst the namesake LP that followed received the "Record of the Year" award. Frank Sinatra's talent and good taste proved to still have great resilience in the midst of these changing musical times.
This deluxe edition, featuring liner notes by Ken Barnes, reissues the ten tracks featured on the original (and quite short) Reprise LP and adds three bonus, previously unreleased cuts: an alternate take of "Yes Sir, That's My Baby" from the original LP sessions (that is quite close to the released version) and live versions of "Strangers in the Night" and "All or Nothing at All" recorded at Tokyo's Budokan Hall in the '80s. These bonus live tracks are fun, but it is quite sure that the original studio cuts remain the real meat of this album.
Thanks to Dan Hersch's beautiful remastering, the sound quality is very fine indeed. Sinatra's vocals, in particular, sound rich and natural. This goes to prove that good "analog" recordings are an excellent source for digital remastering.
The title track combined a memorable Bert Kaempfert melody with lyrics by Charles Singleton and Eddie Snyder. Producer Jimmy Bowen brought the song to Sinatra's attention. Ernie Freeman provided the arrangements. The song had to be hurriedly recorded to win the race against competing versions by Bobby Darin and Jack Jones.
The single took three months to reach the top of the charts and this gave time for Sinatra to begin recording other tunes for an accompanying LP.
All the remaining, original album tracks were produced by Sonny Burke. They were arranged and conducted by Nelson Riddle (who used horns, strings and a quite noticeable organ) to come up with a likeable swinging sound that added flamboyance to Sinatra's voice. The material was recorded during two sessions that took place in May 1966.
The selected songs included covers of older songs from the '20's and '30's as well as newer material presumably aimed at a younger public.
Sinatra sings the "oldies" with a lot of understanding for the time when they were written whilst, at the same time, using swinging arrangements to make them lively. Sinatra, for instance, metamorphoses Johnny Mercer's "Summer Wind" into a sublime easy listening favorite and also excels on his version of Lerner and Lane's "On a Clear Day (You Can See Forever"). At the first go-round of the latter, Riddle gives the arrangement some breath before hitting the listener with a stirring horn-section break.
"All Or Nothing At All" and "You're Driving Me Crazy" are excellent, swinging, big band jazzy tracks well in line with his well-known work.
I am less keen on "My Baby Cares for Me" (I don't enjoy the organ sound here). The other Donaldson/Kahn tune - "Yes Sir, That's My Baby" - fares a lot better.
Finally, Sinatra perfectly handles the melody of "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World" which ends the original album on a high note.
There is also a pair of fine, easy-listening tracks penned by Britain's Tony Hatch: "Downtown" (a worldwide hit for Petula Clark in 1964) and "Call Me" (a sizable hit for Chris Montez in early 1966). They were surely chosen to appeal to a younger audience. But Sinatra sounds clearly less interested - and less convincing - on these tracks. "Downtown" is the worst offender and these attempts at covering this then current popular music sound half-baked at best.
Frank Sinatra had, by now, reached the point where he would rely on the style of his earlier successes rather than looking forward at the "new scene" which was very much at odds with his own musical vision. You can hardly blame him for that.
Although this album cannot quite live up to the achievements of the material released between 1953 and 1960, it nevertheless remains essential to the committed Sinatra fan.