Frank
Sinatra Biography (born December 12, 1915, Hoboken, New Jersey, U.S.—died May 14, 1998, Los Angeles, California) American singer and motion-picture actor who, through a long career and a very public personal life, became one of the most sought-after performers in the entertainment industry; he is often hailed as the greatest American singer of 20th-century popular music. Sinatra's father, Martin, was a tavern owner and part-time prizefighter, and his mother, Natalie—known to all as “Dolly”—was a domineering influence in both local politics and in her son's life and career. Upon hearing the recordings of Bing Crosby, Sinatra was inspired as a teenager to choose popular singing as a vocation. He joined a local singing group, which, as the Hoboken Four, won a talent competition in 1935 on the popular radio program Major Bowes' Amateur Hour. The group toured the country that year, but Sinatra was the only member with serious musical ambitions, and they soon disbanded. For the next few years, Sinatra sang with local dance bands and for remote radio broadcasts. In 1939, while singing and waiting tables at the Rustic Cabin in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, he was discovered and hired by trumpeter Harry James, who had recently quit the Benny Goodman Orchestra to start his own band. The
band singer Sinatra
was enormously influenced by Dorsey's trombone playing and strove
to improve his breath control in order to emulate Dorsey's seamless,
unbroken melodic passages. It was also during this period that Sinatra
proved his mastery of both ballads and up-tempo numbers, and Dorsey
arrangers Axel Stordahl, Paul Weston, and Sy Oliver soon tailored
their arrangements to highlight Sinatra's skills. Often teamed with
singer Connie Haines, or with Dorsey's vocal group, The Pied Pipers
(featuring future recording star Jo Stafford), Sinatra was featured
on memorable sides such as “I'll Never Smile Again,”
“I'll Be Seeing You,” “Without a Song,”
and “Oh! Look at Me Now.” The
Columbia years Sinatra's
success continued unabated until about 1948. In later years, he
speculated that his sudden drop in popularity was because of his
reluctance to change styles and evolve musically. He also garnered
a great deal of negative press throughout 1947–48. It was
about this time that the public first read reports of his friendships
with organized-crime figures, and newspaper accounts were published
of Sinatra cavorting in Cuba with the likes of Lucky Luciano and
Joe Fischetti, a prominent mob figure. There was also the widely
reported incident, and resulting lawsuit, in which Sinatra punched
gossip columnist Lee Mortimer, an action for which Sinatra received
some vindication in later years when it was revealed that Mortimer
had collaborated with the FBI to discredit Sinatra. Whatever the
cause, Sinatra began a five-year period of professional decline
and personal depression. Years of singing as many as 100 songs per
day had taken its toll, and he lost his voice completely for several
months in 1950 because of vocal-chord hemorrhaging. His divorce
from first wife, Nancy, in 1951 and his subsequent stormy marriage
to actress Ava Gardner further harmed his reputation. In addition,
then-new Columbia Records president Mitch Miller cajoled Sinatra
to record several banal novelty tunes that compromised his artistic
credibility. In 1952 his Columbia recording contract came due and
was not renewed, he was dropped by his talent agency, his network
television show was canceled, and Sinatra was considered a has-been.
Ironically, and despite Miller's demands, several of Sinatra's recordings
from this period are now considered among his best, with shining
examples such as “Mad About You,” “Nevertheless,”
“Birth of the Blues,” and, especially, his 1951 recording
of “I'm a Fool to Want You.” The
Capitol years As
excellent as the albums with May and Jenkins were, however, Sinatra's
collaboration with arranger Nelson Riddle was truly a legendary
musical partnership. Riddle, a former big-band trombonist who had
arranged for artists such as Nat King Cole and Ella Mae Morse, scored
some of Sinatra's first Capitol sessions in 1953, initiating a collaboration
that would extend over two decades and hundreds of recordings. Riddle
was, in Sinatra's words, “the greatest arranger in the world,”
and critics agreed. With an instinctive sense for the proper musical
setting, Riddle employed everything from quartets to 50-piece orchestras
for ballad arrangements that were often characterized by a dominant
solo instrument (particularly a mournful trombone), and by Riddle's
“private melodies,” which served as counterpoint to
Sinatra's highly personal approach. For swing tunes, Riddle developed
his trademark “heartbeat rhythm,” a steady, driving
beat, slightly slower than most swing charts, and meant to emulate
“the pulse rate of the human heart after a brisk walk,”
in Riddle's words. Virtually all of the albums the Sinatra-Riddle
team made for Capitol—such as In the Wee Small Hours (1955),
Songs for Swingin' Lovers! (1956), and Only the Lonely (1958)—are
masterpieces. The
Rat Pack and the mob It
was also about this time that Sinatra generated more controversy
for his connections with organized crime. In retrospect, even his
harshest critics now acknowledge that Sinatra's association with
underworld figures was largely one of involuntary servitude, but
there is no question that his fraternizing with notorious individuals
such as Sam Giancana eroded his fan base and jeopardized his political
friendships. In 1960, at the behest of Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., Sinatra
acted as a liaison between Giancana and the Kennedy family during
John F. Kennedy's presidential campaign, in order to ensure votes
for Kennedy. Within a few years, however, the Kennedy administration
launched its war on organized crime and disassociated itself from
Sinatra, while Giancana, having lost a powerful political connection,
did likewise. Sinatra continued to associate with mob figures throughout
the years (“If you sing in joints, you're gonna know the guys
that run them,” was Sinatra's standard defense), but his association
with Giancana was perhaps the most publicized. The
mature years In addition to his curtailed recording activity, Sinatra virtually retired from films during his later years. He concentrated instead on live performance and gave hundreds of international concerts from the late 1970s, with his final public performance in 1995. Although he suffered from failing memory and various physical infirmities during his last few years, he remained a compelling showman to the end. Assessment Sinatra will probably always remain a subject of controversy, largely because of his association with crime figures and his often belligerent attitude toward members of the press. Of his artistry, however, there is little debate, and the more than 1,400 recordings he made during more than 50 years as a performer are regarded by many critics as the most important body of work in American popular vocal music. Almost single-handedly, Sinatra redefined singing as a means of personal expression. In the words of critic Gene Lees, “[Sinatra] learned how to make a sophisticated craft sound as natural as an intimate conversation or personal confession.” Beneath the myth and the swagger lay an instinctive musical genius and a consummate entertainer. Through his life and his art, he transcended the status of mere icon to become one of the most recognizable symbols of American culture. Copyright © 1994-2010 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.com
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