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"Frank Sinatra was a true hero. And I’ve purposely left out the term “American Hero”, because he was a Hero on the worlds’ stage. Sinatra was not simply the Greatest Entertainer of His Time, he championed civil rights when no one else had the guts to. He fought oppression everywhere, at great personal sacrifice. He took positions (that were then), extremely unpopular with a huge majority of the populace. He employed extremely talented writers and playwrights (when no one else would), who were “blacklisted and blackballed” as a result of the efforts of a possible paranoid, and extremely unstable, dangerous accusatory predator, who just happened to find his way onto the floor of the United States Senate. The great majority of these charges were later found to be unwarranted, grounded only in rumor and innuendo, and mostly fabricated.
Frank Sinatra raised more than one BILLION dollars for the underprivileged, worldwide. True he didn’t give his life in battle for his country, but he devoted most of his adult life towards the betterment of his country and its citizens. He gave to all people, regardless of race, color or creed. If this isn’t what constitutes a hero, I don’t know what does. He’ll always be a hero to me because I spent a good portion of my life simply marveling at his wonderful works."
Album Review: Frank Sinatra - The Concert Sinatra
Stereophonic sound recording – what we call stereo – has been around a lot longer than one might think. It didn’t become popular and enjoy wide commercial use (i.e. on records) until the tail-end of the 1950s. But when it caught on, stereo became dominant. Throughout a good part of the 1960s, popular albums were sold in both formats; in some places, you could even buy a mono copy of
The Beatles (“The White Album”) as late as the end of that decade.
Like other subsequent advances (quadrophonic, Dolby noise reduction, surround 5.1, etc.) the whole point of stereo was to give listeners a more authentic recorded product, something that ostensibly got them closer to what they would have heard had they been there when the music was recorded. The history of stereo is full of fascinating stories, but for me the most fascinating is (or had been up until now; more on that forthwith) the recording of the soundtrack for the 1940 Walt Disney animated film
Fantasia. For the soundtrack, the Philadelphia Orchestra under conductor Leopold Stokowski set up at the Academy of Music, with nearly three-dozen microphones set up at strategic points. But since breakthroughs with multi-track audio recording by Les Paul hadn’t happened yet (that would happen later in the decade), for
Fantasia the crew recorded the audio onto the sound-strip of 35mm film. The cameras were synchronized, and thus was born the resulting proto-multi-track, proto-stereo recording. It’s amazingly rich and high fidelity; I picked up an original vinyl copy many years ago, and it’s one of my prized possessions.
But the
Fantasia soundtrack story has a contender for most innovative and forward-looking recording session of the pre-rock era. In February 1963,
Frank Sinatra cut an album for his Reprise label called
The Concert Sinatra. Despite the title, the record wasn’t a live recording. Well, not exactly.
The Concert Sinatra featured the Chairman singing a set of standards and show tunes, backed by an exceedingly large orchestra under the direction of
Nelson Riddle. The recording session employed a recording media similar to that of the
Fantasia sessions thirteen years earlier: 35mm.
Much was made of the technology at the time. Right there on the cover, surrounded by a thick white rule, was information for the hi-fi enthusiast: “This album utilizes Westex 35MM recordation [sic], 24 RCA 44BX microphones, 8 track 21 position mixer console, 73 musicians, and 4 Sound Stages of the Goldwyn Studios in Hollywood. It represents an unparalleled achievement in the technology of sound.”
And it was a mighty fine recording. But all of that technology was funneled, so to speak, down to a then-state-of-the-art stereo master. By 1963 standards, pretty great. But fifty years later, it’s not quite so special. All subsequent reissues of
The Concert Sinatra have used the stereo masters as their source.
But wait: what might happen if engineers could go back and remix/remaster the album from the original 24-microphone recording? The answer is found in Concord’s 2012 expanded reissue of
The Concert Sinatra. Boasting a sonic clarity that borders on three-dimensional,
The Concert Sinatra is truly as close as one could possibly get to sitting in the midst of the Nelson Riddle Orchestra while Frank Sinatra sings his way through cherished pages of the Great American Songbook.
You won’t find any big band swing or pop tunes on this set. In a more serious and reflective mood, Sinatra instead takes on classics from Rodgers & Hammerstein (“I Have Dreamed” from
The King and I, “You’ll Never Walk Alone” from
Carousel). He also turns in one of the most ambitious performances of his recorded career, the lengthy, breathtaking and complicated art song “Soliloquy,” also from
Carousel. The Kurt Weil/Maxwell Anderson number “Lost in the Stars” gets a sensitive, emotional reading.
These and the remaining tracks all add up to make
The Concert Sinatra perhaps the Chairman’s most “serious” recording. Both the original session and the the modern revising of the source tapes take a suitably serious approach to sound quality. Then a mere nineteen years old, his son
Frank Sinatra Jr. worked the engineering and mixing boards on the original 1963 recording. Bringing things full circle, Frank Jr. oversaw the 21st century upgrade from the source tapes of his late father’s session of nearly fifty years ago.
Whether you pick it up for the music or the sound quality, The 2012 reissue of
The Concert Sinatra is an essential addition to every Sinatra fan’s collection.
Review from:
Bill Kopp's Music Blog
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sabaue says:
Feb 21, 2012 6:35 PM
Excellent post Nick! He is a hero to me too!
NickfromPhilly says:
Feb 21, 2012 7:45 PM
Thanks Sally. I know that we're not alone in our feelings. And thank you, Nancy, for featuring my post. Just got back home tonight, after being away since Monday morning for a family funeral in Groton, Connecticut.
It gave me pause, when I entered the Forum this evening, to find my post featured. I'm honored. Whenever I talk about "everything Sinatra," I speak or write from my heart. I'm so glad that, evidently, it shows!
Keith says:
Feb 22, 2012 1:37 AM
I like the idea of the Featured Forum Post and this one by Nick is well deserved - such true words.
June says:
Feb 22, 2012 7:28 AM
Philly Nick, you wrote words of truth. Thank you !
Greggie says:
Feb 22, 2012 8:59 AM
Nick, your words, "he was a hero on the world's stage", were a perfect description of our Frank. Your post deserved the honor of being the first on the "Featured Forum Post". Thank you Nick.
S V PELUZIO JR says:
Feb 22, 2012 9:11 AM
Beautiful post. He was my hero too.
johnofphilly says:
Feb 22, 2012 9:28 AM
When I first read this post in its particular thread of origin, I had found it outstanding. It's no surprise that Nancy appreciates when someone can cover so much ground in just two paragraphs. I'd like to thank Nick for representing the Philadelphia region in truly an exemplary manner.
irene soggia says:
Feb 23, 2012 8:13 AM
Nick, non scrivo in inglese perchè la traduzione mi rimarrebbe troppo difficile, non è come scrivere un post nel Forum quello che scrivo ora.
FRANK è stato un eroe, ed hai usato il termine giusto, per tutto quello che tu hai ricordato ed aggiungerei che lui è stato anche Presidente onorario dell'ASSOCIAZIONE PER I DIRITI CIVILI: " Order Sons Of Italy ". A FRANK dobbiamo anche dire " EROE " perchè ha saputo incarnare " IL SOGNO AMERICANO " non interpretato in senso geografico ma mondiale, lui ha rappresentato la forza vitale di ogni giovane che non si affida alla sorte o alla fortuna per combattere la sua battaglia in onore della vita ma ha LOTTATO con : impegno, tenacia, giustizia per raggiungere il suo " SOGNO ". Per questo è " EROE " per aver dato a tutti i ragazzi del MONDO la forza di credere nelle loro passioni.
GRAZIE FRANK.
irene soggia says:
Feb 23, 2012 9:21 AM
Nick, I translated what I wrote, I helped with google translator, sorry for any inaccuracies.
I thought that translating is easier to read for everyone.
Nick, I do not write in English because the translation I would be too difficult, is not like writing a post in the forum what I write now.
Frank was a hero, and you used the right word, for all that you have mentioned and would add that he was also Honorary President ASSOCIATION FOR CIVIL Diriti: "Order Sons Of Italy". FRANK A must also say "HERO" because it was able to embody "THE AMERICAN DREAM" is not interpreted in a geographical sense but worldwide, he has represented the life force of every young person who does not rely on fate or luck to fight his battle in honor of life but has struggled with: commitment, perseverance and justice to reach his "DREAM". That is "HERO" for giving all children the strength to believe the WORLD in their passions.
THANKS FRANK.
Rich K says:
Mar 6, 2012 3:11 PM
Thank you Nick. That is one fine post, and has much information that, unfortunately, is often forgotten or ignored.