Frank Sinatra's First Collaboration With Arranger Gordon Jenkins Yields Contemplative Bliss on Where Are You?: Melancholic Torch Songs on Par with Any Sinatra Ever Sang
Mastered from the Original Master Tapes: Mobile Fidelity 180g 33RPM Mono LP Traces a Straight Path to Sinatra's Voice, Jenkins' Orchestrations, Music's Emotions
1/4" / 15 IPS analog mono master to analog console to lathe
Where Are You? is perfect in every sense. Recorded when Frank Sinatra was 42, the torch album finds him in impeccable voice and spirit. The dozen tracks fit together as a unified whole; it's difficult to imagine one song missing, or another added. Arranger Gordon Jenkins reads Sinatra's mind, affording him with lush arrangements that break hearts and underscore deliberation. Topping it off, Sinatra's interpretive skills utterly astonish. Genres aside, this 1957 Capitol classic is inarguably one of the ten-best vocal pop efforts made in the 1950s.
The record's splendid beauty and unparalleled emotionalism surface like never before on Mobile Fidelity's numbered-edition 180g mono LP. Mastered from the original master tapes, this mono version focuses the instrumentalists, images, vocals, and ambience in a transparent manner that exceeds the detail on the more-common stereo version. In addition, this reissue marks the first time this gem has been made available in mono in several decades. Akin to previous Sinatra titles, the sound and clarity on this LP takes the Voice into your room, puts him on an imaginary studio stage, and gives you your own private concert.
While not as known as Only the Lonely, Where Are You? is its creative equivalent, a poignant masterwork on which Sinatra reflects on what could have been, ponders life's deep questions, elicits sympathy via romantic distress, and does whatever it takes to get through the night. It is one of Sinatra's alone-at-the-bar statements, his fedora pulled slightly over his eyes, his face fixated on his drink, his only friend the understanding bartender that will keep pouring until last call. Throughout, Sinatra delves into sorrow and desolation. Yet unlike the stark gloom and bleak bitterness on In the Wee Small Hours, this solitary statement echoes with an accepting wistfulness and maturity that parallels a change of seasons or situations.
Jenkins' warm, classically informed arrangements grant Sinatra the sentiments and support he needs. The sumptuous melodies and burnished strings complement the singer's completely natural delivery; seldom has Sinatra sounded so relaxed, dramatic, warm, cello-like, and in a zone. His lyrical phrasing and rhythmic time-keeping are spot-on; his soulfulness and sensitivity of another world. Sinatra's renditions of "Laura," "Autumn Leaves," and "Lonely Town" are the reference-bearing performances of these famous standards.
Side One:
1. Where Are You?
2. The Night We Called It A Day
3. I Cover the Waterfront
4. Maybe You'll Be There
5. Laura
6. Lonely Town
Side Two:
1. Autumn Leaves
2. I'm a Fool to Want You
3. I Think of You
4. Where Is the One
5. There's No You
6. Baby Won't You Please Come Home