Reader Claire, from the United States, no doubt in response to this note from 2000, writes:
Trying to locate a version of Sinatra’s I’ll Be Seeing You. This is not the Dorsey recording. He made a newer recording of that song. It is a swing version. The version with Dorsey was a ballad. This newer version is also in stereo. Having problems finding the album title.
Since the demise of Napster, research for the musical neophyte like me is much more difficult. I did find this version [3.2MB MP3] by Mark Copeland which, if not swing per se, is certainly more up-tempo than the Dorsey recording.
Can anyone else help? I’m trying to get a lead on ex-CBC recording master David Lennick to help; I’m sure he would know the answer.
Comments
Yes I will dig you … in
Yes I will dig you … in the early bright and
when the night is nooooooh
I’ll be lookin’ at the moon … I’ll be lookin’ but I’ll be see … in’ … youuuuuu
It’s from I Remember Tommy, a tribute album and Sinatra’s first after leaving Capitol. There are loads of recordings with Tommy Dorsey, but those are the ones your friend Claire doesn’t want. I had or have the right one on vinyl, maybe CD. If I don’t have it my brother-in-law does (hey, maybe that’s where my CD is). Lemme check around. Stand by …
Looks bad. Found vinyl, but
Looks bad. Found vinyl, but ditched the turntable a few years back. Dispatched alert to brother-in-law Tim, a good egg and chef at the governor’s mansion here in New York — which places him in a good position to answer the question, “What do Republicans eat … besides their young?” Answer: egg-white omelets when staff’s around, cheeseburgers the rest of the time.
He may yet come through. In any case, that’s the album and recording. Ah knowz it well.
Here’s a little sunny day gem ta tide yuz over.
[Peter, sorry about the paragraph tags. Please patch the above comment. Color/background on body, ids and classes; paragraphs will inherit. Same for margins/padding. Much easier to manage.]
Lou, how would Frank have
Lou, how would Frank have sung your name?
Alan,On the other side (and
Alan,
On the other side (and here, after they arrived in the 1920s), the old Bretons said kwee-oh. But the first- and second-generation Franco-Americans, including me, have anglicized to quill-ee-oh. Still, if you call me loo-iss I’ll punch you in the head. So don’t, okay?
Thanks for that Frank tune,
Thanks for that Frank tune, Lou. I’m a pretty entrenched anti-Frankian, but to my surprise I actually liked that one. Maybe it was the lyrics or the delivery, or maybe my mind was just unusually open, but I didn’t get at all the phoney pretentious feeling I’ve come to associate with Frank. Earnest, beautifully sung and swinging too. Overall a 9.6, says the judge from Lithuania.
So at some point when Frank
So at some point when Frank was recording his first records it could have been Lou-ee Kwee-oh, definately a gem for the last line of a Sinatra verse - think Night and Day.
Lou-ee Kwee-ohThat’s the name
Lou-ee Kwee-oh
That’s the name they gave Grandpère, the one he walked around with.
Written out phonetically it seems more like a Hank Williams tune.
I think I found the version
I think I found the version my correspondent is looking for. You can listen to a clip at Barnes & Noble.
For a little while, you can
For a little while, you can listen to more than a clip here.
This is a 1961 recording. That means it’s older than the 40 years at which decent copyrights expire. Let your conscience be your guide.
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