Frank — Sinatra - That-s Life -1966 Jazz- -flac 1... Repack
. Sinatra, who famously preferred recording in a single take, was in a rush because he had a dinner date. The Conflict:
This keyword suggests a user with high-resolution audio needs (FLAC format), a specific interest in the 1966 album That’s Life , and a categorization of Sinatra’s work as "Jazz" (which, as we will discuss, is a fascinating debate). Frank Sinatra - That-s Life -1966 Jazz- -Flac 1...
Sinatra once sang, "I’ve been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn and a king." In FLAC, he is all of them simultaneously. In lossy, he is just a ghost. Sinatra once sang, "I’ve been a puppet, a
Ernie Freeman’s charts provided a gritty, brassy backbone. The title track, in particular, is noted for its "bluesy" feel, Hammond organ accents by Mike Melvoin , and a gospel-style backing chorus that was unconventional for Sinatra at the time. Tracklist: A Journey Through Mid-Century Standards The title track, in particular, is noted for
The album consists of ten tracks that blend resilience with melancholy, often described as a precursor to the themes in "My Way".
Though often categorized as “pop” or “traditional vocal,” That’s Life swims in a jazz sensibility. Arranger Ernie Freeman (and Nelson Riddle on the ballads) uses lush harmonic substitutions—major 7ths sliding into diminished runs. Listen to “The Impossible Dream” (a bizarre, brilliant choice for Sinatra): the orchestration shifts from martial brass to late-night piano voicings. That’s jazz’s DNA—freedom inside a tight frame.