Early Frank Sinatra and Big Band Music.
This week I intend to cover information on one of the
biggest front men of Big Band music, Frank Sinatra and his early carrer.
Frank Sinatra was born December 12, 1915 in Hoboken, NJ. The
son of Italian Immigrants he was raised as an only child and was given a decent
amount of opportunities as a child. His mother ran a home abortion clinic from
her home, which was illegal at the time and was even convicted a couple of
times, but it gave Frank’s family a majority of their money. His father was a
captain of the Hoboken Fire Department. Frank was thrown out of high school
only 47 days after starting due to rowdy conduct and he never finished. In 1938 Frank Sinatra was arrested for having
relations with a married woman which was a crime at the time. He got his early
work as a newspaper delivery boy and riveter for a construction company. These
are some humble beginnings for a man who was about to become one of the biggest
stars of the century.
Frank began to sing on bar tops for tips when he was eight
and a teenager began to sing on street corners and small gigs. In 1935 his
mother convinced him to join a boys singing group known as The Three Flashes
and with the addition of him they became the Hoboken Four. The group won a
contest early on and toured the country playing shows and performing on the
radio but never really took off. In 1939 after some exposure by Henry James
Sinatra caught the attention of Tommy Dorsey and was asked to join his band, this
was a major turning point in his career. Frank’s public debut was on January
16, 1940 with Dorsey’s band and that kicked off a 40 song year with a 12 week
chart topper “I’ll Never Smile Again”
In 1941 Sinatra was a chart topper and male media icon. He
had a large appeal to Bobby Socksers or teenage girls of the time which was at
the time a mostly untapped market. 1942 brought with it the infamous rumor of
Sinatra getting out of his contract with Dorsey in which Dorsey maintained
one-third of the lifetime earnings of Sinatra. The story is that Sinatra had
assistance from the mafia to get out of his contract for only a few thousand
dollars. This story was also dramatized in the movie The Godfather. Sinatra saw great success in his early solo
career during the 1942-44 musicians strike. His career trended upward until about
1948 when it stalled.
That takes us to about the midpoint of Frank Sinatra’s career.
Next week I will cover the latter half of Sinatra’s career and even a brief
introduction to the Rat Pack.
Critical Listening
As it was mentioned in this article I will listen to Ill
Never Smile Again by Frank Sinatra
AABA
Introduction with chorus in the background – The Pied Pipers
Intro by the band
Slow and melodic with an overall sad feeling
Fade out
Your comments on the tune are too skimpy. Lots more to be said.
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