Monday, February 1, 2016

Sinatra at the Sands, at 50

Sinatra at The Sands —  all pictures (except record covers) by John Dominis/Getty Images

“It was probably the most exciting engagement I have ever done in my life, since I started performing.”
Frank Sinatra about playing with Basie at the Sands in January 1966

Last December we celebrated the centennial of Frank Sinatra. I won’t go into why he was important as a crucial part of that moment when American popular music equaled top musicianship, not only from the interpreters, but also from the composers and songwriters; let’s just say that if you love music, you should have at least two or three of his albums at home.

Among his very prolific output, one of the most popular — not necessarily the “best”, however you gauge that — is Sinatra at the Sands, recorded in the last week of a month-long stay at the Copa Room in the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas, which ended on Thursday, February 1, 1966, fifty years ago, today.
“The Basie orchestra was a like juggernaut. When they came at you, after the downbeat and the orchestra started to play, you knew that you had to be part of that or you got lost […] We did things that were really jumping […] I tried to stay in the realm of what the orchestra was playing. I hang back just a little bit, in a sense.”
Frank Sinatra about playing with Basie at the Sands

Back row: Quincy Jones, Frank Sinatra, Count Basie, Grover Mitchell, Marshal Royal, Bobby Plater.
Front row: Teddy Reig, Al Grey, Eddie ‘Lockjaw’ Davis, Freddie Green, Bill Hughes,
Sonny Payne, Eric Dixon, Charlie Fowlkes, Al Aarons, Henderson Chambers, Sonny Cohn, Harry ‘Sweets’ Edison, Leon Thomas.


At the Sands was a fulfilled wish of Sinatra’s, the possibility of playing regularly with Basie. This wish went back a long time and, coming from someone with Sinatra’s musical ear, it’s a good reminder of Basie’s importance as leader of his band, regardless of time and personnel, and it may have to do with his supernatural ability to establish the right tempo for each tune. As Sinatra himself said once,
“You cannot swing if a band doesn’t settle into the proper tempo. I don’t care how good you are, it just doesn’t come out right.”
To which it should be added what he said of Basie
“This is the greatest orchestra at any time in the history of the world.”
Count Basie and Frank Sinatra at a rehearsal in California, summer of 1965. Wyatt Ruther on bass.

Besides the hyperbole, there was a strong kinship between Sinatra and Basie. Basie himself and his men were also fond of Sinatra, and they’ve pointed out his thoroughness at preparing and rehearsing the repertoire, together with his light, one-take approach in the recording studio, as well as his readiness to foot the bill for those preparations and rehearsals. And then, there’s the very audible connection with Eddie ‘Lockjaw’ Davis, whom Sinatra cracks up on “I’ve Got a Crush on You” and the alternative (more on that later) “Street of Dreams”.
“... speaking of the kind of preparation Frank likes, he found out that the band had a couple of days open just before we were scheduled to go into the Sands with him, and he arranged to have he band fly out to Vegas from Chicago at his own personal expenses. That’s Frank […] You’ll never catch him coasting. I’m pretty sure he could have coasted in the Sands, and it still would have been great. But that’s not Frank.”
Basie on Sinatra (Good Morning Blues — The Autobiography of Count Basie)

Sinatra rehearsing with Basie in California, summer of 1965


The album itself is a collection of Sinatra’s staples, adapted for the Basie orchestra. Now, the album cover states “Arranged & Conducted by Quincy Jones”, but these are really Nelson Riddle’s, Gordon Jenkins’s, and Billy May’s arrangements slightly retouched to fit Basie’s classic big band configuration, which was really the only sensible approach to this. It does work very well with the flag-weavers (“You Make Me Feel So Young” even gets the piano intro from Basie's hit “Everyday I Have the Blues”), and not so much with the melancholic and lush “It Was a Very Good Year” and “September of My Years”, where in lieu of the mess of strings, Quincy Jones — according to James Kaplan’s biography — bucket-muted the brass and doubled the lead trumpet with three flutes in unison.

The one radical departure from a version previously recorded by Sinatra was “Where or When”, which arranger Billy Byers turned into a true vehicle for Basie, rather than Sinatra, with a call-and-response, mid-tempo, deep-pocketed arrangement. And far from it being a screamer, there are subtle details like the paraphrase of Dizzy Gillespie's “Bebop”, and the minor third the double bass strikes — against an otherwise major chord — over Sinatra's “mem” on “... can't remember where or when”.


Byers, unmentioned on the original LP, is one of this album's unsung heroes. A frequent collaborator and ghost writer for Quincy Jones, according to Will Friedwald's Sinatra — The Song is You!, he did most of the arrangements on At the Sands. Besides the “Where or When” premiered at the gig (and subsequently adopted by Sinatra as his favoured arrangement), he also did “The Shadow of Your Smile” and “Get Me to the Church on Time”, neither of which would get a studio version. Regarding Byers's relationship with Jones, whose considerable achievements don't need any undue credit, this is worth quoting, again from Friedwald’s book:
“Quincy was an excellent arranger, but he doesn’t write anymore. He found an easier and better way to go. Quincy is highly motivated and finds it tough to sit down long enough to write a whole chart. You have to be a recluse like Nelson [Riddle] was, to do orchestrations. Quincy would much rather be up front with the clients, doing what I call his ‘floor show’.
More protagonists deserving a mention: Bill Miller, Sinatra’s eternal pianist, replaces Basie on piano on a few tunes, and plays celeste too (“The Shadow of Your Smile”); his canonical piano arrangement of “One for My Baby” is the ultimate application of the blues to a standard song. Another long-time Sinatra associate who goes unchecked on the original album is also an old Basie sideman, trumpetist Harry Edison, brought over to do his improvised obbligati behind the singer, as in “Angel Eyes”, done as a voice-piano-trumpet trio.

The other two people deserving a special mention on this album are, first, Freddie Green, whose guitar made Basie's sound for fifty years, giving it not only a second bass line of sorts, but also a rare poignancy. His guitar, albeit unamplified, is perfectly audible on this record (check the instrumental “All of Me”, another great Byers arrangement), which brings us to the second name worth bringing up: sound engineer Lowell Frank, who did an incredible job with just four tracks.

And when all is said and done, there’s Sinatra: Full of energy, caring about the music, and with a breath control which is, well, breathtaking — listen to him at the beginning of “Don’t Worry ’Bout Me”.

“We’re gonna take this here building and move it three feet that way!”
Picture by John Dominis/Getty Images

One more time

As some of you will know, today we have more from where all that came from. In 2006, Reprise/WEA released R2 74075, a 4-CD/1-DVD set called Sinatra: Vegas, with five concerts. CD2 carries an alternative version of the original At the Sands, with almost the same tunes, in the same order, but recorded on different sets (on the “tea break” he says it’s Saturday — January 29th). The versions on this one are looser, less polished (“Don’t Worry ’Bout Me”), more informal, beginning from “Come Fly with Me” (“I’m tired!”), and “I’ve Got a Crush on You”, which he turns into the typical Rat Pack circus, talking to the audience, the band, and even producer Sonny Burke (“we’ll get it the next time, Sonny, don’t worry — keep the tape going.”).

In general his asides are rougher than on the originally published disk, and the “tea break”, with a few identical bits, is lighter, more relevant to its time, and also shorter, which is welcome given Sinatra’s limitations as a comedian — especially compared to Dean Martin (who, Sinatra notes, subbed for him on Mondays). There are also intriguing features, like the “sex!” he shouts on the instrumental break on “Fly Me to the Moon”; he also did it on the original “Come Fly with Me” — was that intended to discard a take? Also, the “Luck Be a Lady” in this box set is not the same as the phantom take included in the “Entertainer of the Century” version of the record (Reprise CD 9 46947-2 — I say phantom because it’s been removed on the latest edition of the album).

"Welcome to Jilly's West, where the elite meet to eat... and if I rhyme that..."

Some of Sinatra’s asides and comments in this “new Sands” are significant music-wise, like the explanation on his choice of “The Shadow of Your Smile” (“here’s a song that was inspired by a marvellous record of Tony Bennett’s”). Towards the end, during the shorter monologue, when he introduces and thanks Basie, Jones, and the band, he notes, as he gazes around the room, that “it looks like an arrangers’ convention up here tonight”, and acknowledges the attendance of Johnny Mandel (author of “The Shadow of Your Smile” — “one of the most exciting arrangers today”), and Don Costa, as well as “a very old buddy” of his, pianist Erroll Garner.

If anything, this alternate take of the Sands ’66, which has the same pristine sound as the original, is proof of Basie’s musicianship and professionalism. He was renowned for his skill with tempos, and the fact is that here, aided by Quincy Jones’s conducting, they hardly change at all (the only notable difference is on the alternative “You Make Me Feel So Young”, which is slower). Generally, the original selection is better than this alternative, even with its very few clams (like a trumpet missing a note on the last “… we are just like a couple of tots” on “You Make Me Feel So Young”).

One more, once

But there’s still more music from those tapes. The Basie band used to do a short, warm-up set, which was followed by a ten-minute break with comedian Pat Cooper, before Sinatra started singing. Combining different titles from different nights, in 1998 Reprise released Live at the Sands (Before Frank), 9 45496-2, a collection of 14 tunes played while the audience waited for Sinatra. Again, the sound quality is spectacular for a live album, with Freddie Green and the rhythm section perfectly audible, and a great balance between sections. From a strictly musical standpoint, there are better Basie records, but the ensemble and some solos by Eddie ‘Lockjaw’ Davis and Al Grey (we get a second, almost identical, take of “Makin’ Whoopee”). And then, even though this does sound like a juggernaut, there's the pocket, Basie's deep, comfortable pocket, as in Eric Dixon's “Blues for Ilene” (sic — a/k/a “Eileen”, although, as per BMI, it is “Blues for Ilean”), a tune based on the famous trumpet-flute combination Frank Wess and Joe Newman exploited in their recordings for Savoy.

One more... twice

(January 2021 update)

In 2018, the Sinatras and Universal Music pulled out three live shows from the archives and put them out as Standing Room Only. Of those three shows, one is the second set from January 28, 1966 at The Sands. Besides the possibility of some edition between tunes and perhaps the monologues, this sounds like a full set (clocking at 55:31), and as such it makes for interesting listening. 

By now it's fairly clear that both "Come Fly with Me" and "I've Got a Crush on You", the first two tunes, are warm-ups ("Crush" remains a very loose vehicle), and Sinatra himself points out that if he gets "I've Got You Under My Skin" right, everything will be OK. 

The surprise in this set is his delicate delivery on "The September of My Years", exposing a fragility hardly expected from this kind of gig, especially after a powerful "... Under My Skin", and a testament of Sinatra's charisma on stage.

Finally, the monologues have some of the same jokes, with some apparently spontaneous asides ("We've been here almost four weeks . . . We've had a marvellous time here... so they tell me"). In the closing one he encourages the audience to go to other shows in town, with a special mention to Bobby Darin ("... he's great, he's exciting, he really is... I'd kill him"). The oddity may be his reference to Xavier Cugat, with Sinatra claiming that he can't remember his own first name, because "it's a very Catholic name and I tried to dock it a long time, because that used to be my name"... Francis Xavier?

The end of an era?

I’m no expert on Sinatra, and have never paid enough attention to his post-Sands recordings. In a way, I’ve always had the idea that this record marked the end of an era. 

Sinatra at the Sands was recorded at the end of a four-week stint at The Sands, Sinatra's home in Vegas, which had begun on January 9th, not quite a month after the singer's 50th birthday. In April, Esquire magazine would publish Gay Talese’s celebrated “Sinatra Has a Cold”, a lengthy and fascinating article which forged his extra-musical image. On April 11, he recorded “Strangers in the Night”, which would become his first big hit since the 1940s with a song he loathed (it would happen again with “My Way”), despite his public promise in the mid-fifties “... not to sing any songs that do not possess musical and lyrical merit.”

In late April-early May, Sinatra and Basie did another, shorter, stint at The Sands, from where the band went straight into the studio to do their first album of Beatles’ songs, presumably to ride the wave of the band’s fourth tour of the US the following August. Before that, “Strangers in the Night” was released on July 2 to become a commercial hit, and on the 19th Sinatra married Mia Farrow.

All that was still a few months away. Sinatra at the Sands keeps the magic frozen in time for us. If you care to listen to it, do it at a loud volume. You'll enjoy the fireworks and, hopefully, the craftsmanship of times past.

***

LINKS
VIDEO
  • There is about an hour and a half of a concert by Dean Martin, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Frank Sinatra (the latter with Count Basie and Quincy Jones), at Kiel Opera House in St. Louis, MO, on June 20, 1965, a benefit for Dismas House. There is an official CD + DVD set, and it floats around on the internet.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

Excellent article! Lots of research and some rare photos. I've never seen any mention in discographies or elsewhere of Sinatra and Basie going back to the Sands in April or May, 1966. This may be a minor correction to the article. Otherwise, a very interesting read. Since it was written in 2016, I'm sure you're aware that now we have the release of a third night from Sinatra and Basie in January, 1966, at the Sands. It's part of the 2018 Sinatra box set "Standing Room Only."

Fernando Ortiz de Urbina said...

Hi,

I'm aware of the "third" Sands concert available on Standing Room Only. I will update the blog on that at some point (before a "fourth" concert is released, hopefully).

I do have a source for that return to the Sands with Basie, but haven't been able to trace it yet (it might be the booklet for the Vegas boxed set?).

Thanks for reading!

Unknown said...

Please post here if you find the source for that Sands return engagement by Sinatra and Basie. Thanks for your response and also for the great article!

Anonymous said...

Sinatra was a never a one-take man in the studio. He was a one-take actor, not singer.

Fernando Ortiz de Urbina said...

Thanks for the comments. I still have to find the reference for that return engagement at the Sands.

As for whether Sinatra was a one-take singer, off the cuff (that is, having read Friedwald, Clarke and others) I have the distinct impression that even with famous exceptions such as the original "... Under My Skin", Sinatra would do as few takes as possible. Did he do more regularly?

F

Anonymous said...

On the subject of Sinatra and the number of takes he would do, he was a real perfectionist in the studio when recording. This would lead him to regularly do more than one take as he felt necessary. In contrast, with his acting he felt he was best on the first take because he believed he was an instinctive actor. So we’re left with the one-take actor and the singer who regularly did several takes to reach perfection.

Jim Waller said...

Wonderful article Fernando! So glad you included the information about Billy Byers writing a lot of the Sinatra and Basie at the Sands arrangements. He was a friend of mine and I was his private student. One of the reasons he did so much ghost writing (besides for Quincy Jones) is that all the successful arrangers knew he could mimic their style so they could put their name on the chart and everyone would think they wrote it! He was also an incredible trombonist and one of the nicest people you could ever meet!

Jim Waller