Yeah, you heard me- Frank Sinatra.
I had to get a new I-Pod- type machine and decided to program some Frank into it- after all, he was the VOICE of a generation.
And, you know what? He was really great... I mean inarguably great. His phrasing (he evidently learned breath control from his old boss Tommy Dorsey), and his melodic sense are uncanny. But what's truly inspiring is the quality of his voice- the tone, the timbre. It's a unique, beautiful instrument.
When he sings a song like
The House I live In (That's America to Me), his sincerity inhabits the lyric and turns a patriotic cliche into a pastiche of great American ideals. I'm not sure why, but it seems somewhat leftist to me, even though it touches on all the current Republican themes: family, church, etc, it also mentions "the worker at my side," and "all races and religions." Certainly not Tea- Party friendly words. Of course, the fact that it was cowritten by Abel Meeropol, later the adoptive dad of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg's sons, and Earl Robinson, blacklisted during the McCarthy era, may also contribute to the leftist feeling of the song.
I love it anyway. This film was made by Albert Maltz (blacklisted- Hollywood 10). The song starts at 6:36.
4 comments:
This is great. I want to hear "The House I live in" sometime soon, I hope.
I don't care much for Sinatra actually. I think he had a great voice, but that thick sort of thuggish accent came through too clearly. Dean Martin on the other hand... his voice is like *butter*. His live recordings also have a charm to them that Sinatra seemed to replace with vitriol and hubris. So yeah... that's the source of my current fascination with Dino Martino. ;D
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