Frank Sinatra — That's Life
Album: Sinatra Reprise
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Your rating:
Total ratings: 785
Released: 1966
Length: 3:05
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 785
Length: 3:05
Plays (last 30 days): 0
That's life (that's life), that's what all the people say
You're ridin' high in April, shot down in May
But I know I'm gonna change that tune
When I'm back on top, back on top in June
I said that's life (that's life), and as funny as it may seem
Some people get their kicks stompin' on a dream
But I don't let it, let it get me down
'cause this fine old world, it keeps spinnin' around
I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn and a king
I've been up and down and over and out and I know one thing
Each time I find myself flat on my face
I pick myself up and get back in the race
That's life (that's life), I tell you I can't deny it
I thought of quitting, baby, but my heart just ain't gonna buy it
And if I didn't think it was worth one single try
I'd jump right on a big bird and then I'd fly
I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn and a king
I've been up and down and over and out and I know one thing
Each time I find myself layin' flat on my face
I just pick myself up and get back in the race
That's life (that's life), that's life and I can't deny it
Many times I thought of cuttin' out but my heart won't buy it
But if there's nothin' shakin' come this here July
I'm gonna roll myself up in a big ball and die
My, my!
You're ridin' high in April, shot down in May
But I know I'm gonna change that tune
When I'm back on top, back on top in June
I said that's life (that's life), and as funny as it may seem
Some people get their kicks stompin' on a dream
But I don't let it, let it get me down
'cause this fine old world, it keeps spinnin' around
I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn and a king
I've been up and down and over and out and I know one thing
Each time I find myself flat on my face
I pick myself up and get back in the race
That's life (that's life), I tell you I can't deny it
I thought of quitting, baby, but my heart just ain't gonna buy it
And if I didn't think it was worth one single try
I'd jump right on a big bird and then I'd fly
I've been a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn and a king
I've been up and down and over and out and I know one thing
Each time I find myself layin' flat on my face
I just pick myself up and get back in the race
That's life (that's life), that's life and I can't deny it
Many times I thought of cuttin' out but my heart won't buy it
But if there's nothin' shakin' come this here July
I'm gonna roll myself up in a big ball and die
My, my!
Comments (160)add comment
GREAT TUNE!! I was 11yrs old when this came out. NYC Top 40/ Top10 AM radio stations used to play it a lot. 1966 was a good year for me. Brings back fond memories. Thanx RP!
Edweirdo wrote:
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
I Agree! Very True! ...his comment was very embarrassing! ...although he is probably incapable of being aware of that!!!
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
I Agree! Very True! ...his comment was very embarrassing! ...although he is probably incapable of being aware of that!!!
thewiseking wrote:
WRONG! GREAT TUNE! Thanx RP!
the Sinatra reprise years; a nadir for "ole blue eyes" . this is the crap recorded when he was way over the hill. the voice was gone, the hair was gone, the orchestrations embarassing. this stuff brings to mind joe piscopo more than it does the great frank sinatra. bad choice bill.
WRONG! GREAT TUNE! Thanx RP!
Edweirdo wrote:
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
I just finished "Joker" starring Jochim Phoenix ... timely.
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
I just finished "Joker" starring Jochim Phoenix ... timely.
thewiseking wrote:
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
the Sinatra reprise years; a nadir for "ole blue eyes" . this is the crap recorded when he was way over the hill. the voice was gone, the hair was gone, the orchestrations embarassing. this stuff brings to mind joe piscopo more than it does the great frank sinatra. bad choice bill.
Orchestrations embarrassing, you say? You do realise this is the incomparable Nelson Riddle?
If there's nothing shaking this here July...
I'll be getting evicted from my Brooklyn apartment, served papers this here July. I won't be rolling up into a big ball. Except of the fire to fight in court. Fuck them.
I'll be getting evicted from my Brooklyn apartment, served papers this here July. I won't be rolling up into a big ball. Except of the fire to fight in court. Fuck them.
My rating is only 5
ThePoose wrote:
Reminds of this 1960s fact: the reason why the Beatles' Strawberry Fields Forever missed out on attaining No. 1 on the British hit parade was that this spot was occupied at the time by Please Release Me by Englebert Humperdinck.
Imagine.
Whatever Humpy was singing, it had more music than Strawberry Fields Forever. I grew up with the Beatles, and that song was a mulligan along with a few others from that album: SPLHCB. That song was repetitive and so syrupy we wanted to .. well the album got frisbee'd pretty fast. There were plenty of other bands from which to choose. All excellent. What the Beatles were putting out at the time? Not so much.Imagine.
Good version but I'll take James Brown's.
You can not help but love this station.
Hurray for Bill.
the Sinatra reprise years; a nadir for \"ole blue eyes\" . this is the crap recorded when he was way over the hill. the voice was gone, the hair was gone, the orchestrations embarassing. this stuff brings to mind joe piscopo more than it does the great frank sinatra.
bad choice bill.
halfgazo wrote:
No this was the crap that made Beatles sound better than they were.
Reminds of this 1960s fact: the reason why the Beatles' Strawberry Fields Forever missed out on attaining No. 1 on the British hit parade was that this spot was occupied at the time by Please Release Me by Englebert Humperdinck.
Imagine.
sherf wrote:
In the late 70's I went to a Frank show at the Universal Ampitheatre, and there was a whole row of spiked-out punkers in front of us who were there early and into the show from start to finish. It was quite a spectacle. actually. Outside of Hendrix, Frank is the only performer I've seen who has the entire hall in his control for the full performance. From the back row of the orchestra to the back row of the hall, the place was HIS.
Sinatra was swinging
all the drunks they were singing
we kissed on a corner
and danced through the night
Shane McGowan
redtex wrote:
You young whipper-snappers have no respect! Why I oughtta...ahh, never mind, if you don't get Frank, you won't understand.
Yes, I'm afraid you are correct there, personally speaking, this is an electic station, we can expect anything and Frank Sinatra held the world in the palm of his hand in his day, there is no doubt about that, it's history and I am part of that history, so thank you Radio Paradise for balancing so well the songs you play here!
bigB_3 wrote:
At least the DLR Cover has some spunk!
This is old & busted.
You young whipper-snappers have no respect! Why I oughtta...ahh, never mind, if you don't get Frank, you won't understand.
Jersey boy makes good. It don't get no better.
Hinkamp wrote:
cool.. a David Lee Roth cover.
At least the DLR Cover has some spunk!
This is old & busted.
Hated it.
there are better versions of this classic, this seems remade and not for the better.
Anything the "chairman of the board" does is classic.
In the late 70's I went to a Frank show at the Universal Ampitheatre, and there was a whole row of spiked-out punkers in front of us who were there early and into the show from start to finish. It was quite a spectacle. actually. Outside of Hendrix, Frank is the only performer I've seen who has the entire hall in his control for the full performance. From the back row of the orchestra to the back row of the hall, the place was HIS.
Hinkamp wrote:
cool.. a David Lee Roth cover.
Excellent!
If this doesn't make you swagger, I don't know what will. Followed by Teen Spirit! Thanks be to God as my grandfather used to say
dionysius wrote:
Aw, get over it. That's life. Even late, approaching-self-parody Frank is better than most everything else anyone else has ever sung.
The Sixties weren't all about the Beatles and LSD. Great as they are.
Well said.
Zep wrote:
35 Years Ago
Zep: Dad, what is this garbage?
Dad: One of the best, son, someday you will like Sinatra, you'll see.
Today
Son: Dad, what is this garbage?
Zep: Frank Sinatra son, one of the best.
35 Years Ago
Matts: Dad, what is this garbage?
Dad: One of the best, son, someday you will like Sinatra, you'll see.
Today
Son: Dad, what is this garbage?
Matts: Frank Sinatra son, the crap your grandfather used to like
halfgazo wrote:
No this was the crap that made Beatles sound better than they were.
LOL! what a great summary of changing trends in the American music scene back in the day. Rock n' roll took over because the youth didnt care for the big band Decca stuff of their elders.
Not my fave Frank tune, but still gets my toe tappin'
I love this tune by Frank - in the chorus, he seems to be actually singing, not just declaiming like he does in a lot of his other stuff. (For just that reason, I generally prefer Tony Bennett...) 8
cool.. a David Lee Roth cover.
How does this song only have a 6.8? Sinatra wasn't always gold, but this is one of his best.
While Frank Sinatra sings "Stormy Weather," the flies and spiders get along together... Cobwebs fall on an old skippin' record....
2 artists in a row from the "Sopranos" soundtrack. First Cake,now Frank
35 Years Ago
Zep: Dad, what is this garbage?
Dad: One of the best, son, someday you will like Sinatra, you'll see.
Today
Son: Dad, what is this garbage?
Zep: Frank Sinatra son, one of the best.
Wow. Ol' Blue Eyes between Cake and Cracker. Only on RP. Not my kind of music but I love the variety. And the man had pipes.
It's Frank's world, we just get to live in it.
Turgid!
so nice. i'm a sucker for blue eyes.
dionysius wrote:
The Sixties weren't all about the Beatles and LSD. Great as they are.
No this was the crap that made Beatles sound better than they were.
Too "oldie" to be player here.
Shesdifferent wrote:
Agreed!
Idiot.
Ha, first thought this was a Doors song, hearing the initial organ notes as the song opened.
Aw, get over it. That's life. Even late, approaching-self-parody Frank is better than most everything else anyone else has ever sung.
The Sixties weren't all about the Beatles and LSD. Great as they are.
Chairman of the Board in da house
hippiechick wrote:
Again
Agreed!
not one of the best songs of his repertoire...... why this one?
I've heard a number of musicians praise Frank Sinatra highly. Neil Peart, who really loves his songs, comes to mind. I can't see it myself, but maybe that's just a personal problem.
I can never hear this Sinatra song without thinking of Joe Piscopo doing his SNL impression of him. It was perfect!
hippiechick wrote:
Again
My family played this song at my grandfather's funeral.
He loved it and it was a fitting tribute to him.
when he was a kid he was the biggest f-ing bad ass, party loving, revolutiionary cool dude in the land...to bad rock&roll did not exist when the made his stand.
He would have been Jim Morrison's competition.
One of Frank's best.
Come on guys... lets get a lot more groovier then this... Now I have to go to my second favorite web station...
Say goodnight, Frank.
What an odd choice for web play when there are catalogues (pre-1965, at least) of better selections from the Chairman.
What a song for earthlings!
daveesh wrote:
"when you've loved and lost like frank has, you know what life is all about..."
Thanks for the Spinal Tap reference!
Bobbie Fleckman!
It's about time RP plays something with personality.
There have been far too many generic tracks being played lately.
am wrote:
As a teen, I thought he was such a poser. As an adult, I've tried to develop an appreciation for ole Blue Eyes. It's not happening. :headshake: There is something disingenuous about him. He makes my tummy turn.
Yeah, I could never see what my parents, especially my mom, saw in him. Blech. Gimme Dean Martin anyday!
I'm dissappointed by the end of this song:
"I'm going to curl up and die"
? That just counters the entire rest of the lyric.
Hell yeah!
GregX59 wrote:
How much better would this be if it was Ray Charles singing it?
Sinatra had good feeling and phrasing, but there were better singers.
Yeah, but Sinatra was never supposed to be a great singer. He was a great performer . Loved him for that - he had few equals.
"when you've loved and lost like frank has, you know what life is all about..."
am wrote:
As a teen, I thought he was such a poser. As an adult, I've tried to develop an appreciation for ole Blue Eyes. It's not happening. :headshake: There is something disingenuous about him. He makes my tummy turn.
What he/she said.
Not my fav Frank song, but I still dig the dood's moosic overall.
Check out the album with Frank, Count Basie and Basie's orchestra (Sinatra - Basie) Most excellent. The horns and Frank really hit it. If you don't like that, then, OK, ol Frank isn't for you.
Please spare us the pukey-faces. You can do better than that. Tisk!
byrd wrote:
Whenever I hear this song, I can't help but hear David Lee Roth singing it. Ahhh... Eat 'em and Smile... brings me back to 6th grade.
And then there was the parody of I'm Just a Gigalo,
"I'm just a Big Ego".
It's works on so many different levels
this one's fun to sing
How much better would this be if it was Ray Charles singing it?
Sinatra had good feeling and phrasing, but there were better singers.
Need to follow it with Deano.
Deceased, but still the Chairman of the Board.
a nice surprise hearing this
Overrated..but tolerable...after all, it's RP!
Remember the scene in the limo from This is Spinal Tap?
This limey feels the same as the band. < Pushes button to raise the privacy screen between the chauffeur and the band >
Like him or not, you gotta admit the guy had talent by the ton
This song was in a show I worked on for a few months last year. It's so much better when it's sung with a little more emotion and the tempo picked up just a bit. A guaranteed crowd pleaser every time. When Sinatra sings it, it's just hard to listen to.
woozurdaddy wrote:
Zappa and then Sinatra. Gotta love RP.
Sic transit Zappa sic transit Sinatra.
Whenever I hear this song, I can't help but hear David Lee Roth singing it. Ahhh... Eat 'em and Smile... brings me back to 6th grade.
woozurdaddy wrote:
Zappa and then Sinatra. Gotta love RP.
Indeed, even out here in December! ;)
classic
Oh God, please make it stop. I've worked in an Italian restaurant for two and a half years and this is one of the songs that plays once every two hours. Frank Sinatra may have his merits, but he just reminds me of yuppies slurping down spaghetti.
thewiseking wrote:
Check out his early material...
I'll give this a try. Thanks for the advise!
am wrote:
As a teen, I thought he was such a poser. As an adult, I've tried to develop an appreciation for ole Blue Eyes. It's not happening. :headshake: There is something disingenuous about him. He makes my tummy turn.
Check out his early material as a crooner, from the 40s. sweet and melodic, but before he had a real signature style.
then, check out his early to mid 1950s stuff, ex, nice and easy, etc.. more mature, sad, world weary, and sophisticated.
avoid the 60s through 80s crap. over the hill. the voice is gone. this stuff was geared towards the tour buses of blue haired old ladies and paulie walnut types.
As a teen, I thought he was such a poser. As an adult, I've tried to develop an appreciation for ole Blue Eyes. It's not happening. :headshake: There is something disingenuous about him. He makes my tummy turn.
frankie as a bloated, toupeed, joke.
obnoxious.
strictly for "social athletic" clubs and bad italian restaurants.
at this point in his career ole blue eyes should have hung it up.
After so, so many listens, I'm just now appreciating that scintillating electric organ.
I'm in a mixed marriage. I'm a Frank fan, and the Wife is a Judy Garland fan. I'm of the opinion that all Judy's songs are about her, that you can't listen to a Judy Garland performance without relating the song to something that happened in her life. When I hear a Frank song (especially the early stuff, not like this bombastic number), it's all about the song.
Just me.
Ol' Blue Eyes followed by Toad the Wet Sprocket. That's life on RP.
Bill,
It's so nice how you know how to add variety to our life!
Way to go!
D'Jac :nodhead:
I'm glad to know I'm not the only one who never cared for Ol' Blue Eyes. Just because he never have had a voice less doesn't mean he didn't need them. He doesn't know what to do with his diphthongs. However, I just read somewhere one of his ex's said he was hung like a yak. On second thought, maybe he did know what to do with his dip...er, never mind.
w00t! Gotta love Frank!
Ol' Blue Eyes followed by Toad the Wet Sprocket. That's life on RP. Love it.
Thank you.
Yes.
It ain't Rock n' Roll... but, That's Life, and I can't deny it... I like it!
This is not Frank singing this song. Or is it?
aharamanx wrote:
This does belong here, yes.....yes, it does.
Well said.
mig7 wrote:
Great actor? Great talent? Please, he was just a thug who bought and bullied himself a career.
Well said...
But was he a friend of YOURS, or a friend of OURS?
indypaul wrote:
I don't know. Is that anything like sacrilege? If so, then yes.
oh, pshaw. there's nothing wrong with not liking Sinatra. one should ideally acknowledge his talent, but one need not like his music.
thermion7 wrote:
I never liked Sinatra. Is that sacrelidge?
I don't know. Is that anything like sacrilege? If so, then yes.
Fahgetabouttitt! :nodhead:
I never liked Sinatra. Is that sacrelidge?
i like joe piscopo much better
At least piscopo was entertaining
Great actor? Great talent? Please, he was just a thug who bought and bullied himself a career.
hippie wrote:
Well maybe I can talk Justin Timberlake into doing a cover of Frank's songs for you.
I'm not a huge fan of Frank Sinatra or Justin Timberlake, and yet...I think that idea is not half bad.
YEEAAHHH!
Frank can be so much better - sounds like he was just going thru the motions
It's Franks world - we only live in it
mangum wrote:
not a big chairman fan but love the organ in the background
The organ sounds like Booker T. Jones to me. Frank sounds like he came in for a 7 A.M. recording session after a night of nursing some Canadian Club.
What a great post.
dmax wrote:
Naw. This is what the older guys made the younger guys to. Heh.
My favorite Sinatra: Old Man River. He takes the low note on "You get a little drunk and you lands in jaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiiiiiiiillllllllllll" and then drops it even lower and then glides up. And when he tells you that he gets weary and sick of tryin, you kinda believe it - just for a minute.
I agree with those who have rightly said this is NOT one of Sinatra's best. He had talent, it's just so inconsistent among his many recordings - and on some (like this one) it's nonexistent... sounds like he can't even carry a tune. In contrast, check out "Summer Wind" - a favorite of mine that showcases his ability when he was willing to put some effort into it. Smooth and beautiful... unlike "That's Life."
lumpy wrote:
I agree frank is a great voice, however he has absoulutley nothing on Tony Bennet and Nat King Cole.
Vinnie, take Mr. Lumpy out back and, you know, teach him some respect
This swings Baby!
This is a pleasant suprise. I like hearing Ol' Blue Eyes once in a while but, I prefer the recordings he made with Count Basie (not that Nelson Riddle was a slouch, mind you).
I still prefer a good Cab over martinis.
A better actor than singer. I'd prefer Tony Bennett or Dean Martin.
oh myyyyy, Frankie Baby.... Thanks, Bill :goodvibes.gif:
Frank kicks ass..
not a big frank fan, but this is great. Perhaps only Frank could pull this off...
Woke me up...