It Might as Well Be Swing | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Frank Sinatra |
Cover: | Itmightaswellbeswing.jpg |
Released: | August 1964 October 1986 |
Recorded: | June 9–12, 1964, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California |
Genre: | Vocal jazz, traditional pop |
Length: | 27:22 |
Label: | Reprise |
Producer: | Sonny Burke |
Prev Title: | Robin and the 7 Hoods |
Prev Year: | 1964 |
Next Title: | 12 Songs of Christmas |
Next Year: | 1964 |
It Might as Well Be Swing is a 1964 studio album by Frank Sinatra, accompanied by Count Basie and his orchestra. It was Sinatra's first studio recording arranged by Quincy Jones.
The recording of "Fly Me to the Moon" which appears on this album has become one of Sinatra's most popular. This was Sinatra and Basie's second collaboration after 1962's Sinatra-Basie.
Sinatra's cover version of "Hello Dolly" on the album features a new second verse improvised by Sinatra, which pays tribute to Louis Armstrong, who had topped the Billboard charts with his own version of the song earlier in 1964.
It Might as Well Be Swing is a reference to the title of the well known jazz standard "It Might as Well Be Spring".