A Swingin' Affair!

~ Release by Frank Sinatra (see all versions of this release, 10 available)

Tracklist

1CD
#TitleRatingLength
1Night and Day
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-26)
recording of:
Night and Day (Cole Porter; from “The Gay Divorce”) (on 1956-11-26)
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1932)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA), Chappell Music Ltd., Warner Bros. (holding: file NO releases), Warner Bros. Music (publisher; do NOT use as release label), Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!), Warner Bros., Inc. (Warner Bros. Music Division), Warner/Chappell (Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.), WB Music Corp. (1929–2019) (until 2019-05-28) and Harms, Inc. (on 1932-11-18)
part of:
Gay Divorce
3:59
2I Wish I Were in Love Again
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Wilbur Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
cello:
Cy Bernard, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (75- US saxophonist, the nephew)
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin, Marshall Sosson and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-20)
cover recording of:
I Wish I Were in Love Again (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell Music (UK)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
recording of:
I Wish I Were in Love Again (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell Music (UK)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
2:28
3I Got Plenty o’ Nuttin’
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Jack Dumont and Dominic Mumolo
baritone saxophone:
Robert Lawson
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
James Arkatov (American cellist and photographer), Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Don Raffell (reeds) and Buck Skalak
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Lou Kievman (violist)
violin:
Victor Arno, Alex Beller, Kurt Dieterle, Walter Edelstein, Henry Hill (Violin player), Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross and Eudice Shapiro (Violinist)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, in 1956-11)
cover recording of:
I Got Plenty o’ Nuttin’ (Porgy and Bess, catch-all for jazz & pop arrangements) (on 1956-11-15)
lyricist:
Ira Gershwin and DuBose Heyward
composer:
George Gershwin (composer)
publisher:
Dubose and Dorothy Heyward Memorial Fund Publishing, Frankie G. Songs, Nokawi Music and Gershwin Publishing Corp (in 1935)
is based on:
Porgy and Bess: Act II, Scene I. “Oh, I got plenty o’nuttin’”
3:11
4I Guess I’ll Have to Change My Plans2:23
5Nice Work If You Can Get It
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Wilbur Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
cello:
Cy Bernard, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (75- US saxophonist, the nephew)
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano, Shorty Sherock and Harry “Sweets” Edison (on 1956-11-20)
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin, Marshall Sosson and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1956-11-20)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1956-11-20)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1956-11-20)
arranger and orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-20)
cover recording of:
Nice Work If You Can Get It (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist:
Ira Gershwin (in 1937)
composer:
George Gershwin (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA) and Gershwin Publishing Corp (in 1937)
part of:
A Damsel in Distress (1937 film score)
part of:
Crazy for You (1992 musical)
part of:
My One and Only (1983 Broadway musical)
2:21
6Stars Fell on Alabama
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Jack Dumont and Dominic Mumolo
baritone saxophone:
Robert Lawson
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
James Arkatov (American cellist and photographer), Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Don Raffell (reeds) and Buck Skalak
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano, Shorty Sherock and Harry “Sweets” Edison (on 1956-11-15)
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Lou Kievman (violist)
violin:
Victor Arno, Alex Beller, Kurt Dieterle, Walter Edelstein, Henry Hill (Violin player), Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross and Eudice Shapiro (Violinist)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1956-11-15)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1956-11-15)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-15)
cover recording of:
Stars Fell on Alabama (on 1956-11-15)
lyricist:
Mitchell Parish
composer:
Frank Perkins
publisher:
EMI Mills Music Inc. (ASCAP-affiliated) and Mills Music
2:37
7No One Ever Tells You3:23
8I Won’t Dance
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Jack Dumont and Dominic Mumolo
baritone saxophone:
Robert Lawson
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
James Arkatov (American cellist and photographer), Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Don Raffell (reeds) and Buck Skalak
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano, Shorty Sherock and Harry “Sweets” Edison (on 1956-11-15)
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Lou Kievman (violist)
violin:
Victor Arno, Alex Beller, Kurt Dieterle, Walter Edelstein, Henry Hill (Violin player), Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross and Eudice Shapiro (Violinist)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1956-11-15)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1956-11-15)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1956-11-15)
arranger and orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-15)
cover recording of:
I Won’t Dance (1935, lyrics by Dorothy Fields, from “Roberta”) (on 1956-11-15)
lyricist:
Jimmy McHugh (songwriter) and Dorothy Fields (American librettist and lyricist) (in 1935)
composer:
Jerome Kern
publisher:
Chappell Music Ltd., Cotton Club Publishing, EMI Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS‐affiliated), Memory Lane Music Ltd., T.B. Harms Co. and Universal Music Publishing Ltd. (UK subsidiary of Universal Music Publishing Group)
is based on:
I Won’t Dance (1934, lyrics by Hammerstein/Harbach, from “Three Sisters”)
3:22
9Lonesome Road3:54
10At Long Last Love
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Wilbur Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
cello:
Cy Bernard, Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (75- US saxophonist, the nephew)
trombone:
George Arus, Ed Kusby and Dick Noel (trombone)
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Conrad Gozzo, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Nathan Ross, Mischa Russell (violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin, Marshall Sosson and Gerald Vinci (American violinist and strings conductor)
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-20)
cover recording of:
At Long Last Love (on 1956-11-20)
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1938)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA)
part of:
You Never Know
recording of:
At Long Last Love
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1938)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA)
part of:
You Never Know
42:24
11You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Skeets Herfurt and Harry Klee
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Cy Bernard, Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other) and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Dick Nash and Pullman “Tommy” Pederson
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn and Shorty Sherock
valve trombone:
Juan Tizol
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Arno, Victor Bay, Alex Beller, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Erno Neufeld, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin and Marshall Sosson
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To (on 1956-11-28)
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1943)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA), Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996) and Warner/Chappell North America Limited (formerly incorporated as Marmalade Music Ltd., from 1968/09/19–1999/11/09)
part of:
The 16th Academy Award for Best Original Song (number: 2)
2:03
12I Got It Bad and That Ain’t Good
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Skeets Herfurt and Harry Klee
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Cy Bernard, Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other) and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Dick Nash and Pullman “Tommy” Pederson
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn and Shorty Sherock
valve trombone:
Juan Tizol
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Arno, Victor Bay, Alex Beller, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Erno Neufeld, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin and Marshall Sosson
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
I Got It Bad (and That Ain’t Good) (on 1956-11-28)
lyricist:
Paul Francis Webster (in 1941)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (in 1941)
publisher:
EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP), Robbins Music Corp., Sony/ATV Harmony and Webster Music Co.
part of:
The Real Book (compilation of jazz standards, Volume I)
3:22
13From This Moment On
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Skeets Herfurt and Harry Klee
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Cy Bernard, Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other) and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Dick Nash and Pullman “Tommy” Pederson
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn and Shorty Sherock
valve trombone:
Juan Tizol
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Arno, Victor Bay, Alex Beller, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Erno Neufeld, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin and Marshall Sosson
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
From This Moment On (Kiss Me, Kate, 1953 film & 1999 Broadway revival casts only) (on 1956-11-28)
lyricist and composer:
Cole Porter (composer) (in 1950)
part of:
Kiss Me, Kate (musical)
3:51
14If I Had You
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
If I Had You (jazz standard) (on 1956-11-26)
writer:
James Campbell (British songwriter and music publisher), Reginald Connelly and Ted Shapiro
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Campbell Connelly Inc. (ASCAP affiliated), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP) and Robbins Music Corp.
recording of:
If I Had You (jazz standard) (on 1956-11-26)
writer:
James Campbell (British songwriter and music publisher), Reginald Connelly and Ted Shapiro
publisher:
Campbell Connelly & Co. Ltd., Campbell Connelly Inc. (ASCAP affiliated), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP) and Robbins Music Corp.
2:35
15Oh! Look at Me Now
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Skeets Herfurt and Harry Klee
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Cy Bernard, Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer) and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Alvin Stoller
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Ted Nash (40s-80s US swing reedman, uncle of the other) and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Dick Nash and Pullman “Tommy” Pederson
trumpet:
Pete Candoli, Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn and Shorty Sherock
valve trombone:
Juan Tizol
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Maxine Johnson and Dave Sterkin
violin:
Victor Arno, Victor Bay, Alex Beller, David Frisina, Jacques Gasselin, Erno Neufeld, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist), Paul Shure, Felix Slatkin and Marshall Sosson
vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra
conductor:
Nelson Riddle
orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1956-04, on 1956-11-26)
cover recording of:
Oh! Look at Me Now (on 1956-11-28)
lyricist:
John DeVries (in 1941)
composer:
Joe Bushkin (in 1941)
publisher:
Campbell Connelly, Embassy Music Corporation and Hampshire House Publishing Corp.
recording of:
Oh! Look at Me Now
lyricist:
John DeVries (in 1941)
composer:
Joe Bushkin (in 1941)
publisher:
Campbell Connelly, Embassy Music Corporation and Hampshire House Publishing Corp.
2:49
16The Lady Is a Tramp
producer:
Voyle Gilmore
alto saxophone:
Harry Klee and Willie Schwartz
baritone saxophone:
Joe Koch
bass trombone:
George Roberts (american bass trombone)
cello:
Ennio Bolognini (Argentine-American cellist and composer), Edgar Lustgarten and Eleanor Slatkin (US cellist, b. Aller)
double bass:
Joe Comfort
drums (drum set):
Irv Cottler
guitar:
Nick Bonney (guitarist)
harp:
Kathryn Julye
piano:
Bill Miller (pianist)
tenor saxophone:
Jules Kinsler and James Williamson (Saxophone player)
trombone:
Murray McEachern, Dick Noel (trombone) and Juan Tizol
trumpet:
Harry “Sweets” Edison, Ray Linn, Mickey Mangano and Shorty Sherock
viola:
Alvin Dinkin, Stanley Harris (US big band viola player) and Maxine Johnson
violin:
Victor Bay, Alex Beller, Harold Dicterow, Kurt Dieterle, David Frisina, Alex Murray (violinist), Erno Neufeld, Lou Raderman, Eudice Shapiro (Violinist) and Joseph Stepansky
lead vocals:
Frank Sinatra (American singer and actor, “Ol’ Blue Eyes”) (on 1956-11-26)
orchestra:
The Nelson Riddle Orchestra (on 1956-11-26)
conductor:
Nelson Riddle (on 1956-11-26)
arranger and orchestrator:
Nelson Riddle
recorded at:
Capitol Tower in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1956-11-26)
recording of:
The Lady Is a Tramp (from “Babes in Arms”) (on 1956-11-26)
lyricist:
Lorenz Hart (in 1937)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1937)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA) and Warner Chappell Music Ltd. (no slash; used 1988–1996)
part of:
Babes in Arms (full musical)
part of:
Pal Joey
53:15