Music Review: Frank Sinatra – Nothing But the Best

After Frank Sinatra's successful run with Capitol Records he decided to strike out on his own and start his own label. So, in the late 60's he founded Reprise. Nothing But the Best is a greatest hits collection from Frank's Reprise years.

While Sinatra's Capitol songs are the type of songs you hear in musicals and movie soundtracks, his Reprise works are more the type you hear over your spaghetti dinner. Sinatra still sang swingy, vocal pop but now the strings sounded more classical and the songs were more reflective.

The album gets off to a bit of a rocky start. On "Come Fly With Me", "Luck Be a Lady", and "Bewitched" Sinatra and his producers sound like they are trying to replace the classic versions of the songs. The orchestra is top notch of course, but Sinatra tries to improvise on the vocals to give the songs a looser feel. This cause his voice and the music to clash a bit, his vocal notes seem to stretch longer than the musical melodies. This is especially troublesome on "Luck Be a Lady" and "Bewitched" because they sound awkward unless everything about them is perfect.

After the first few songs the meat of the album starts. "Fly Me to the Moon", "Strangers in The Night", "Call Me Irresponsible", and "Something Stupid" are all album highlights. They are some of Sinatra's finest later work. Like most of his later work, they are sentimental, string-laden, and mid-tempo. Unlike most it, they are not bogged down in those characteristics. Not only that, they are now intrinsically linked with Sinatra because of his performance of them.

Towards the later part of the album, the energy begins to lag with too many ballads in a row.

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Article Author: Mark Kalriess

Mark Kalriess loves to enjoy and write about video games, movies, music, and sports. You can read his opinions on all these subjects at the Entertainment Center. You can listen to his opinions on sports on the podcast, Washington Sportsjam.

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