Frank Sinatra - In The Wee Small Hours (Remastered 1998) Hi-Res

Artist: Frank Sinatra
Title: In The Wee Small Hours (Remastered 1998)
Year Of Release: 1955 / 1990
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Jazz, Pop, Vocal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz
Total Time: 49:14
Total Size: 141 Mb / 1.00 Gb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: In The Wee Small Hours (Remastered 1998)
Year Of Release: 1955 / 1990
Label: Capitol Records
Genre: Jazz, Pop, Vocal
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz
Total Time: 49:14
Total Size: 141 Mb / 1.00 Gb
WebSite: Album Preview
1. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning (Remastered 1998) (3:00)
2. Mood Indigo (Remastered 1998) (3:31)
3. Glad To Be Unhappy (Remastered 1998) (2:35)
4. I Get Along Without You Very Well (Remastered 1998) (3:40)
5. Deep In A Dream (Remastered 1998) (2:47)
6. I See Your Face Before Me (Remastered 1998) (3:22)
7. Can't We Be Friends? (Remastered 1998) (2:46)
8. When Your Lover Has Gone (Remastered 1998) (3:09)
9. What Is This Thing Called Love (Remastered 1998) (2:33)
10. Last Night When We Were Young (Remastered 1998) (3:15)
11. I'll Be Around (Remastered 1998) (2:57)
12. Ill Wind (Remastered 1998) (3:44)
13. It Never Entered My Mind (Remastered 1998) (2:40)
14. Dancing On The Ceiling (Remastered 1998) (2:55)
15. I'll Never Be The Same (Remastered 1998) (3:02)
16. This Love Of Mine (Remastered 1998) (3:34)
Expanding on the concept of Songs for Young Lovers!, In the Wee Small Hours was a collection of ballads arranged by Nelson Riddle. The first 12" album recorded by Sinatra, Wee Small Hours was more focused and concentrated than his two earlier concept records. It's a blue, melancholy album, built around a spare rhythm section featuring a rhythm guitar, celesta, and Bill Miller's piano, with gently aching strings added every once and a while. Within that melancholy mood is one of Sinatra's most jazz-oriented performances -- he restructures the melody and Miller's playing is bold throughout the record. Where Songs for Young Lovers! emphasized the romantic aspects of the songs, Sinatra sounds like a lonely, broken man on In the Wee Small Hours. Beginning with the newly written title song, the singer goes through a series of standards that are lonely and desolate. In many ways, the album is a personal reflection of the heartbreak of his doomed love affair with actress Ava Gardner, and the standards that he sings form their own story when collected together. Sinatra's voice had deepened and worn to the point where his delivery seems ravished and heartfelt, as if he were living the songs.