In The Wee Small Hours
Capitol Records (1955)

Number 100 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest
albums of all time.
- What Is This Thing Called Love?
- Last Night When We Were Young
- I'll Be Around
- Ill Wind
- It Never Entered My Mind
- Dancing On The Ceiling
- I'll Never Be The Same
- This Love Of Mine
- In The Wee Small Hours
- Mood Indigo
- Glad To Be Unhappy
- I Get Along Without You Very Well
- Deep In A Dream
- I See Your Face Before Me
- Can't We Be Friends?
- When Your Lover Has Gone
One of the crowning achievements of the Sinatra-Riddle collaboration, and
arguably the first concept album, Small Hours
was initially
released as two 10-inch EPs or four 7-inch 45s, but was quickly re-released
as a 12-inch LP. This set of recordings began the pattern of alternating
between swinging, jazz-influenced albums and albums of brooding introspection.
In this collection, Riddle's spare arrangements and judicious use of strings
and a celesta create a mood of wistful melancholy that is the perfect complement
to Sinatra's amazing, vulnerable vocal performances. Even the cover art—awash
in shades of turquoise—gives a hint at the early morning blue mood
conveyed by the performances on this album.
The frail and somewhat thin, boyish sound that characterized Sinatra's recordings in the forties had evolved into a coarser tone Riddle likened to the woody timbre of the viola (the result of a vocal chord hemorrhage) and one that was perfectly suited to convey a knowing, world-weary understanding of the treacheries of adult love.
I remember walking into a record store 20 years ago and seeing a black-and-white
poster of a Sinatra—instantly familiar, but clearly from an earlier
era—standing behind a microphone, hat tipped back with his hands buried
deep in his pockets. I didn't know it at the time, but the photo was
from the back of In the Wee Small Hours. I purchased my first Sinatra
album that day (Songs for Swingin' Lovers!) and
was hooked. I knew there was more to the man than My
Way
and New York,
New York
, but just how much was suddenly made crystalline. I returned
within a couple of days and purchased In the Wee Small Hours. Over the
next couple of years the extremely knowledgeable staff of Real Records
and CDs in Iowa City hunted down every Sinatra reissue in existence for
me. Since then I've collected a number of different original copies of
"Small Hours" in every format and from several countries.
While I still regard Swingin' Lovers
as my favorite album, and the one
I always return to, the beauty of In the Wee Small Hours continues to unfold
the older I become. Perhaps youth can't fully comprehend the complexity
and contradictions expressed in these interpretations. Indeed, most accomplished
artists can't find subtleties that the mature Voice discovers in these songs.
Only after having loved and lost a few times; after discovering that genuine
tragedy comes not with conflict between Right and Wrong, but between two
Rights; and that it's possible to be completely vulnerable and masculine
at the same time, does this album's truth become clear.
Sinatra is often depicted as the avatar of the swinging 1950s adult lifestyle, but friends and relatives have described both Sinatra and Riddle as two of the loneliest men they have ever known. Perhaps this album brings listeners closer to the truth behind the public facades.
Recorded February 8, 16, 17, and March 4, 1955, except for Last Night
When We Were Young
(recorded on March 1, 1954).











