Ray Sinatra

Raymond Dominic Sinatra

Ray Sinatra in 1952
Born (1904-11-01)November 1, 1904
Agrigento, Sicily
Died November 1980
Las Vegas, Nevada, US
Nationality American
Known for Conductor

Raymond Dominic Sinatra (November 1, 1904 – November 1980) was a Sicilian-born American conductor, best known as the music director of Mario Lanza.

Life

Ray Sinatra was born in Agrigento, Sicily in 1904.[1] He was a second cousin of Frank Sinatra.[2] He received an extensive musical education under many artists.[1] He became a conductor, bandleader and arranger.[2] In 1935 he was working in Boston as a radio band leader.[3] In 1936 he was conductor of Lucky Strike's Your Hit Parade.[4] Frank Sinatra contacted Ray in the Spring of 1937 while he was working in the NBC house orchestra, asked whether they were related, and mentioned that he wanted to become a singer. Ray checked and found they were cousins, and helped find a stint for Frank on an NBC radio show.[5] Frank wanted to change his name to "Frankie Trent". Ray dissuaded him, saying "Are you kiddin'? 'Sinatra's the most beautiful name in the world – it's so musical."[6] Ray became well known as a conductor. Early in Frank Sinatra's career, when he was leading the instrumental jazz combo The Four Sharps, he was asked by Fred Allen whether he was related to Ray Sinatra. Not long after, Ray was being asked if he was related to Frank.[7]

The Ray Sinatra Orchestra

Ray Sinatra conducted popular music competently, although he tended to use over-elaborate arrangements, and his orchestra sometimes sounded more like a big band.[8] He was a modest success in the swing era.[9] He worked well with Mario Lanza in two recording sessions at Republic Studios in Hollywood, including a famous version of Granada.[8] Ray Sinatra conducted Mario Lanza's 1950 Be My Love, the singer's first single to sell a million copies.[2] Sinatra would conduct many of Lanza's future non-operatic recording and radio show songs.[8] Ray Sinatra was bandleader for Lanza on an NBC radio show in 1951 with that pushed Lanza's expected earnings up to $750,000 for the year.[10] In 1954 Sinatra led the orchestra for the Ziegfeld Follies at Sands Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, with choreographer Bob Gilbert.[11] For many years he was bandleader at the Tropicana Las Vegas.[3]

Selected recordings

Notes

    Sources

    External sources

    Media related to Ray Sinatra at Wikimedia Commons

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