Artist: Frank Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim
Title: Sinatra/Jobim: The Complete Reprise Recordings
Year Of Release: 2010/2013
Label: UMC (Universal Music Catalogue)
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:57:50
Total Size: 135 mb | 330 mb
Tracklist:01. The Girl From Ipanema
02. Dindi
03. Change Partners
04. Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (Corcovado)
05. Meditation (Meditação)
06. If You Never Come To Me (Inútil Paisagen)
07. How Insensitive (Insensatez)
08. I Concentrate On You
09. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
10. Once I Loved (O Amor en Paz)
11. The Song Of The Sabia
12. Drinking Water (Aqua de Beber) (Album Version)
13. Someone To Light Up My Life (Album Version)
14. Triste (Album Version)
15. This Happy Madness (Estrada Branca) (Album Version)
16. One Note Samba (Samba de Uma Nota So) (Album Version)
17. Don't Ever Go Away (Por Causa de Voce) (Album Version)
18. Wave
19. Off Key (Desafinado)
20. Bonita
This compilation album gathers tracks from two sets of recording sessions Frank Sinatra did with Brazilian singer/songwriter Antonio Carlos Jobim, one in 1967 and another in 1969. The first set of sessions in late January and early February 1967 resulted in the ten-track LP Francis Albert Sinatra & Antonio Carlos Jobim, released later in 1967. Jobim joined Sinatra, singing on such tracks as "The Girl from Ipanema," "I Concentrate on You," and "Baubles, Bangles and Beads," with bossa nova arrangements by Claus Ogerman. The second set of sessions held in February 1969 were intended for a follow-up LP to be called SinatraJobim that got as far as having an album cover designed, but never came out. Most of the tracks were issued in 1971, during Sinatra's temporary retirement, on an album called Sinatra & Company, although a couple turned up on singles in the U.S. or overseas, and the Sinatra/Jobim duet "Off Key (Desafinado)" sat in the can for decades, not turning up until the box set The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings in 1995. Despite being separated by two years, the first ten tracks and the second ten fit well together. Sinatra sings gently and sensitively throughout. The chief difference lies in the musical backing, as the 1969 tracks were arranged by Eumir Deodato, with orchestra conducted by Morris Stoloff, and they have less of a Brazilian feel. Still, the sessions have always belonged together on a single disc, and they constitute a special niche in the Sinatra catalog.
Download links: