March 5, 2007

"Send in the Clowns"

At the beginning of the third act of Frank Sinatra's career (post-retirement), it must have been increasingly difficult for him to find material to equal the caliber of standards he'd recorded in the past from the Great American Songbook. By 1973, Sinatra had been recording music for nearly forty years, and had recorded hundreds of songs. He began to record the work of more contemporary (by 1973 standards) artists, such as Joe Raposo, Stevie Wonder, and even a Beatle, George Harrison.

(picture from the Wikipedia entry)

For his 1973, post-retirement comback album, Ol’ Blue Eyes Is Back, he recorded a Stephen Sondheim tune from a popular musical of the day, A Little Night Music.

"Send in the Clowns" refers to a phrase used in a circus when an unforeseen disaster has occurred, with the clowns being sent in to distract the audience from the problem. The song served as the centerpiece of Ol' Blue Eyes Is Back, and was sort of like that album's "My Way," with autobiographical lyrics such as "Isn't it rich? Isn't it queer, losing my timing this late in my career?". I've wondered if Sinatra didn't select "Send in the Clowns" because he felt a connection to it due to the "sad clown" image used on the Grammy Award winning cover to his 1958 album Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely.

Here is his performance of it from the 1973 television special, Magnavox Presents Frank Sinatra:



From the Ol' Blue Eyes Is Back liner notes: "Ol' blue eyes is back as the singer who'll still close his eyes when he's getting into it."

No comments:

Post a Comment