The cover of Hamill's book |
Frank Sinatra was born on
December 12th., 1915 in Hoboken, New Jersey. Today would have been his
hundredth birthday — he died in May, 1998 at the age of 82. To mark the
centenary of Sinatra's birth, Little Brown and Company has re-released Pete Hamill's
excellent book Why Sinatra Matters. Originally
released in November 1998 — just six months after the singer's death — the book
became an American bestseller. This new version, published in October, includes
a new introduction by the author in honour of Sinatra's centenary.
It took me a long time to
appreciate the work of Frank Sinatra. When you're a kid you tend to be
narrow-minded in your musical appreciation. Sinatra was just uncool. Through
most of the 1960s (my teenage years) my love of pop music was focused on the British
"beat-groups". I knew a bit about the American rock-and-rollers who
had inspired bands like The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and The Who. But their
music was almost a decade-old; it sounded strange and dated to a youngster —
the popular music of a different generation. And as far as the swing-jazz and
crooning on the 40s went, well that was ancient stuff that only old people
could enjoy.
I did hear Sinatra quite
often on BBC Radio in the 60s — especially on request programmes like Two-Way Family Favourites and Housewives' Choice. BBC Radio and TV
back then really was "broadcasting"; granted, there were programmes
that focused on specific types of music, but on many shows you could expect to
hear all sorts of popular music. And Frank Sinatra was very popular ... with
the old folk!
"... Strangers in the night, exchanging glances ... " |
But the few Sinatra songs
that did break through in that decade were not that impressive to my ears.
There was "Strangers in the Night" in 1966. It was a #1 hit — his
first in 11 years. But it sounded quite trite to me. It amazed me to learn much
later that Frank agreed. He actually thought that it was "a piece of shit
... the worst fucking song that I ever heard." Maybe that recording's "doo-be-doo-be
doo" coda wasn't playful scatting, after all; maybe it was a dig at the fatuousness
of the lyrics?
And at the very end of the
decade came Sinatra's 1969 recording of "My Way" — originally a
French pop song, but now the tune was matched to a Paul Anka lyric. This was
even worse than "Strangers in the Night". Again, Frank agreed. Later
he would sometimes tell audiences, "I hate this song." Despite a
common misconception that the lyrics sum up nicely Sinatra's personal approach
to life, this bombastic song does not reflect the man's rather humble view of
his art — regardless of his often boorish behaviour. Until he had this song
pushed at him — against his better instincts — as the chance for a big hit, he
would not have dreamed of singing such a conceited hymn of self-celebration.
Yeah, I know, I didn't really hear much
of his stuff, but the little that I did hear, I didn't like. Case closed. Ah, the sure
arrogance of youth!
And on into the 70s, Sinatra
and his Rat Pack buddies seemed to represent to us youngsters the worst sort of
reactionary Hollywood entertainers; they always seemed to be in a Las Vegas
casino — the belly of the beast. Misogynists, it seemed. Republicans for Nixon.
The worst kind of show-biz dinosaurs. Enemies of Woodstock Nation; the
antithesis of the progressive counter-culture.
Unlikely meeting of unlike minds: Frank and Elvis on TV together |
Oh, and then there was his
diatribe against rock-'n'-roll, sometime in the late 50s (before he started
singing Beatles songs in the late 60s): "Rock n Roll is the most brutal,
ugly, desperate, vicious form of expression it has been my misfortune to hear."
Not too cool for the hordes of people who happened to groove to the likes of Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis.
And so it went. Sinatra's
career went into a slow decline. He did some duet recordings with current pop
stars. And then he died in 1998.
Guess what song they played over and over on the radio and TV obituaries?
Right ... "My Way".
Always well-dressed — the snazzy Frank, invariably in a hat |
But about five years after Frank
died I started to listen to a lot more jazz and jazz singers: Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald,
Sarah Vaughan. I was hearing more and more about Sinatra's Capitol recordings
of the 1950s, mostly arranged and conducted by Nelson Riddle. These were the
fruits, I read, of his great comeback. He was thought to be dead-and-gone as a
popular entertainer by the late-40s. Then he won an academy award for his role
in the film From Here to Eternity in
1953. And late that same year he began a long series of successful collaborations with
Nelson Riddle.
The first album of theirs I
dipped into was In the Wee Small Hours (1955). What a revelation
that was. A superb album. I would listen to the whole thing over and over on my
long commutes to and from work. A wonderful set of songs that were beautifully
arranged and impeccably sung. This was not the Frank Sinatra I was familiar
with. Not the man I thought I knew. Perhaps it was the languor of its approach
— its elegiac mood, its melancholic tone. By this time in the mid-50s Frank was
no longer the pop idol of hysterical "bobby soxers", he was now, apparently, the spokesman
for middle-aged male sentimentality! He still had that magic vocal technique,
but it was now employed on more interesting, more mature material. Within a couple of years I had most of Sinatra's 1950s albums in my collection!
Hamill's book — Why Sinatra Matters — is not a straight
biography. It is organised chronologically:
following some introductory material — which includes a reminiscence of an
evening Hamill spent in 1970 with Sinatra in a New York saloon — this small
book then proceeds with five chapters charting his career chronologically by
focusing on one important element of the story in each chapter. It's an Interesting
technique — the story moves thematically and chronologically at the same time. The
book tells you a lot about Frank's life, but biographical detail is not the
point — Why Sinatra Matters is really
an extended rumination on how the key facts of Sinatra's life made him who he
was as both a personality and a performing artist.
Chapter 2, for example,
deals with the bigotry Sinatra faced because of his Italian-American ancestry.
His grandmother's family, the Garaventes, came from Genoa. His grandfather's
family, the Sinatras hailed from a village near Palermo in Sicily. These
grandparents immigrated to the U.S. in the 1890s with two young children who
would eventually meet in Hoboken, get married, and parent Francis Albert
"Frank" Sinatra.
With Nancy, his first wife, in Hoboken, New Jersey (mid-30s) |
His grandparents' move to
the U.S. was part of a huge influx of European immigrants in the 35 years
leading up to WWI; from 1880-1915 about 24 million crossed the Atlantic — about 4.5 million of those were Italians.
Most of the Italians came from the land-exhausted rural areas of the south,
especially Sicily. The majority of this uneducated group were illiterate — not
only did they not know virtually a word of English, they couldn't read or write
Italian either. This made it very difficult for them to get good jobs — they
had to settle for manual labour and other non-skilled occupations.
Frank as a kid in Hoboken |
The majority of these
Italian immigrants had to settle for a low — if not the lowest — position on
the social ladder. They clung to much of la
via vecchia (the old way), the traditional values and customs of their home
country, primarily as a defense mechanism. Their children (first generation
Americans), of course, quickly adopted la
via nuova, (the new life) because of their exposure to American
institutions and their immersion in American culture.
Frank (top, right) as a member of the Hoboken Four |
For some easily-identifiable
linguistic, religious and social reasons, Italian-Americans were one of the
most discriminated against immigrant groups. This prejudice, of course,
extended into the entertainment industry. Many musicians, singers, and actors
of Italian-American extraction changed their names, in order to get ahead. Dean
Martin was born Dino Crocetti; Connie Stevens was Concetta Ingoglia; and Tony
Bennett began life as Anthony Benedetto. Frank Sinatra had been advised on
several occasions to do the same. When he joined the Harry James Orchestra in
1939, James tried to persuade Frank to become Frank Satin. "I said no way,
baby," Sinatra recalled years later; "The name is Sinatra. Frank
fucking Sinatra."
Frank resented the terrible
bigotry imposed on the Italian-American community. It made him angry; and he
went out of his way to fight back against it. In fact, his early experiences of
prejudice against his own community made him stand up later against bigotry
wherever he faced it. He went out of his way to promote the interests of
Afro-American musicians, for example, and he defended them against
discrimination.
Frank and Ella performing together on TV |
The third chapter in
Hamill's book deals with the theme of loneliness. Sinatra was an only child —
an unusual thing within the Italian community. Furthermore, during his
childhood he was often neglected emotionally. His father was aloof; and his
mother was often out of the house pursuing her own interests and projects. Natalina
Sinatra (née Garaventa) was a real go-getter. She was full of schemes and
ambitions, working for many years as an operative for the Democratic Party
within her own community in Hoboken. Frank endured long periods of solitude as
a young child, and that must have fuelled his fantasies of fame and fortune.
There was a private and sensitive side to his character, despite that tough and
supremely self-confident swagger he usually showed.
Loneliness, argues Hamill,
is the key theme of his life and work. The sense of abandonment — especially of
love gone wrong — got stronger as the years went by. Melancholic songs of loss
and thwarted dreams lie at the heart of his greatest recordings in the 1950s.
He had an intense, ardent and doomed relationship with Ava Gardiner for most of
the 50s; and the emotional strain of that failed romance drives much of the
song-selections of that decade.
Recording for Capitol in the 50s |
But the prime reason, of
course, why Sinatra matters — beyond the attitude and the themes of his work —
is because of the brilliance of his vocal technique. During the height of Sinatramania
in the early 1940s, Frank was often dubbed "Swoonatra" because of the
ardent, often hysterical, behaviour of his young female fans ("bobby
soxers"). Later in his career he was often known either as "The
Chairman of the Board" — he had started his own record label (Reprise) in 1960
— or as "Ol' Blue Eyes". But the tag that stuck the most, and the one
that is clearly the most appropriate, is "The Voice".
Almost from the very
beginning, Sinatra's singing voice was something special. He began singing
professionally in 1935. The bandleader Harry James heard him singing on a New
York radio station in 1939 and signed him to front his orchestra. From there
Sinatra's career quickly took off. He had only been with them for about six
months, when Sinatra joined — with James's blessing — the Tommy Dorsey
Orchestra. He stayed with Dorsey for three years; in September 1942 he managed
to wangle himself out of his contract to go solo. Not only that, he also manage
to persuade the orchestra's musical arranger, Axel Stordahl, to go with him
(promising to pay him five times the salary that Dorsey did). Dorsey never
forgave Sinatra for his effrontery.
Sinatra fronting the Harry James Band (1939) |
What is so special about the
singing of Sinatra, The Voice? As Hamill summarizes it: "it was a
combination of voice, diction, attitude and taste in music that produced the
Sinatra sound". The voice, as with most singers, evolved over time: as
Hamill so aptly puts it "from a violin to a viola to a cello, with a rich
middle register and dark bottom tones."
In his everyday
conversation, Sinatra used lots of slang and lingo. He could be very coarse —
favouring the profane and crude argot of the streets. But when he was singing
his diction was impeccable. He always sounded the consonants at the end of
words, and you can hear every word in a lyric. Nothing is slurred, mumbled, or
mangled. Sinatra once talked about his deliberate efforts to improve his
speech. He used the example of movie stars to inspire him. With these changes,
he recalled, "I started becoming, in some strange way, bilingual. I talked
one kind of English with my friends. Alone in my room, I'd keep practising the
other kind of English."
When Frank sang an upbeat,
sunny lyric, you could hear an appropriate lightness of feeling in his
approach; when he sang a melancholy song, you could the sadness in his voice.
He effortlessly moulded his vocal instrument to match the meaning of a song. As
Hamill points out, he also learnt how to add tenderness into his performance
while remaining manly. He was one of the first Americans to perfect the Tender
Tough Guy persona.
Sinatra learnt two very
important things from his time with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra. The first was
the way that Dorsey prepared a show as though it was one long piece of music —
as though it was a carefully thought out album. [This was in an era before the
long-playing album was born.] It was all dance music, but Dorsey planned it so
that it proceeded with different moods and movements towards a crescendo.
Sinatra applied the same technique to the concept albums he recorded for
Capitol records in the 1950s. When he was working with Nelson Riddle, he would
make a list of the 14, or so, songs he wanted to record for a particular album.
Riddle would then prepare the musical arrangements. Everything would be in
place once the recording began in the studio.
Sinatra singing with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra (early 40s) |
The other lesson Sinatra
learnt from Dorsey was how to breathe. Dorsey was a trombone player with
incredible breath control. He could release air slowly enough to support long
lyrical melodic lines. Indeed, he was able to tie the end of one musical phrase
into the start of the next. Sinatra used the same technique with his singing.
To improve his breath control, he would spend a lot of time in swimming pools —
especially under water. He developed a distinctive legato sound, delivering the
lyrics of a song in long, uninterrupted lines. His perfect phrasing matched lines
and half-lines in order to bring out the sense of the song's lyric — perfect
storytelling.
Telling a story — Frank studies a song lyric in between takes |
Effective communication of
the lyrics in a song was crucial for Frank. He always studied them carefully in
the studio, right before a take. There are several photographs of Sinatra with
the sheet music spread out in front of him. They seem to encapsulate perfectly
his ability to grasp fully the meaning and emotion in a song. He's not studying
the music — he couldn't read music — he was reading through the lyrics.
... much older, but still studying lyrics |
Sinatra
had an ability, like no other singer of his generation, to get inside a song.
When he was ready to sing, he delivered it as though it were a short story. You
couldn't help but get involved in his performance, following every nuance of
his perfect phrasing. There are so many versions he did of oft-recorded songs
that sound like they're the definitive one. He didn't just sing a song. He got
inside it and delivered it as a dramatic performance. There are very few
singers who can match him on this.
"One For My Baby (And One More For the Road)" by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer"
And, then, there is the
matter of Sinatra's impeccable taste in songs. Before the concept of the
"great American songbook" had been dreamt up, Sinatra had been busy
constructing concept albums built on the very best songs written during the
first four decades of the 20th century — songs by Irving Berlin, George
Gershwin, Rodgers and Hart, Harold Arlen, Cole Porter, Jerome Kern, etc. Frank
developed this taste very early — he spent long hours as a young singer listening
to their work and memorizing the lyrics. In the many albums he recorded during
his peak in the 1950s, it is very difficult to find a single dud or piece of
filler.
Conferring with Nelson Riddle about an arrangement |
Finally, a word about
Sinatra's choice of arrangers and musical directors. As mentioned earlier, he
worked effectively with Axel Stordahl in the 1940s. And, then, when he started
recording albums for Capitol in 1953, he was lucky enough to hook up with arranger
and bandleader Nelson Riddle. Between 1953 and 1981 they did an incredible 24
albums together. Sinatra's impeccable taste in material was evenly matched by
Riddle's ability to create sympathetic and effective orchestrations. He spread
solos creatively among woodwinds and brass, and he never made his string
parts too lush and cloying. Nothing in his work sounds dated or annoying to the
modern ear.
Why
Sinatra Matters may be seen as a paean; but it's certainly
not an uncritical hagiography or a defensive apologia. Hamill concedes that
Sinatra was often cruel, crass, and obnoxious. He could be violent, too; and he
had questionable ties to the Mob. On the other hand, as Hamill points out, much
of the more serious accusations made against the man have never been
substantiated and — even after years of close surveillance by the F.B.I. — he
was never indicted. Much of the negative talk against Sinatra, it seems, was
based on rumours spread by professional gossips in the entertainment trade and
by journalists and pundits who disliked his don't-give-a-shit, take-no-prisoners
attitude. The man did not believe in trying to ingratiate himself with anyone. "It's
Sinatra's world," Dean Martin once quipped, "we just live in
it."
This is a well-written, concise, and thoughtful inquiry into the career of Frank Sinatra. Sinatra was — as most great
artists are — a man of contradictions. Many people are repelled by
the more unsavoury aspects of his personality. But underneath that rough and
often vulgar facade lay a man of great sensitivity and artistic talent. He
worked hard to build that talent. And he listened carefully as he developed his
musical technique. Frank Sinatra became the greatest practitioner of the American popular song.
He made it an art form. Sit back and listen, for example, to the magic that
Sinatra and Nelson Riddle create with In the Wee
Small Hours or Only the Lonely,
and you'll find yourself mesmerized by the wonderful material, the beautiful
voice, the incredible technique, the gorgeous arrangements. Just perfect. And
that's why Sinatra matters.
Pete Hamill (born June 24, 1935) is an American journalist, novelist,
essayist, editor and educator. Widely traveled and having written on a broad
range of topics, he is perhaps best known for his career as a New York City
journalist. Hamill was a columnist and
editor for the New York Post and The New York Daily News.
Why Sinatra Matters by Pete Hamill was published by Little Brown and Company, New York in 1998. The
new edition was released in October, 2015 to mark the centenary of Sinatra's
birth. The book has 180 pages of text, 8 black-and-white, full-page photos
between chapters, a list of recommended recordings, a brief bibliography of
Sinatra books consulted, and a short list of recommended Sinatra movies.
The 1955 Capitol album: In the Wee Small Hours |
Frank Fucking Sinatra......I couldn't quite believe you taking up the cause on this one Clive BUUT i have to say, I certainly learned a few things from ur blog that shed a different light on the man and his music. Not to say that I am wholly convinced but I will give you this - you've persuaded me to get my hands on a few of his LPs and give them a listen (though I'm more likely to borrow copies from the library - or perhaps my parents library - first :) I'll report back to u on my explorations. Thanks for this! cheers
ReplyDelete"Not wholly convinced," but willing to give the man a listen. That's enough for me! As I mentioned in the piece, give "In the Wee Small Hours" or "Only the Lonely" several listens. Or try them both! I'd be very interested in your reaction.
DeleteAs always, thanks for your response.
Even though his was not the music of my generation, I always enjoyed it. With the exception of those awful songs you mentioned from the 60s, of course! Great voice. He was a wonderful actor as well. Though older than my father, he rather resembled him, and that made me want to like him. But I just never liked him, couldn't get past that obnoxious Rat Pack stuff, mob connections, etc. I remember later hearing an aunt saying on more than one occasion that "Frank Sinatra is not a nice man." She had had some sort of interaction with him, or had observed him at close range, I can't quite remember the story. She gave no details but simply said, in measured tones, "Frank Sinatra is not a nice man." Back to his acting, if you have not seen The Manchurian Candidate (1962), you might find it interesting.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your response. There are plenty of people who fall under the heading of "not a nice man"; but that is no reason to ignore the greatness of their art. Bob Dylan, for example, is not a particularly engaging or sympathetic public figure, but his recorded work is magnificent.
Delete