Nancy Sinatra Reissue Campaign via Light In The Attic [Coming 2021]

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by FJFP, Oct 8, 2020.

  1. Bob F

    Bob F Senior Member

    Location:
    Massachusetts USA
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  2. Tina_UK

    Tina_UK Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
    Nancy featuring the Muppets set in a retro graphic style would make a pretty cool T-shirt,the 70’s are so in over here. I’d wear it.
     
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  3. lou a

    lou a Forum Resident

    Don’t forget there’s a second TV Special from the seventies .
     
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  4. pghmusiclover

    pghmusiclover Senior Member

    I only saw that one time, but I the only thing I remember is Nancy singing "Drummer Man" and I loved that song! I think I recorded the special with my portable cassette recorder! It wasn't until probably 15 years later I found out she had released that as a single, along with a handful of other singles I'd never heard before! As we know, Nancy keeps a tight rein on her recordings and videos so I haven't been able to find it anywhere online, except for a brief 0:15 snippet on Facebook!
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2023
    Man at C&A and lou a like this.
  5. lou a

    lou a Forum Resident

    I don’t know why she hasn’t allowed LITA to include more rarities on her releases.
    Hopefully a lost singles package will be forthcoming, along with a rarities collection.
    It’s about time, and her fan base isn’t getting any younger!
     
  6. Man at C&A

    Man at C&A Senior Member

    Location:
    England
    I have a pile of Nancy Sinatra 45s and almost all of them have a great non album track on them, often both sides.

    Love Eyes, The City Never Sleeps At Night, Drummer Man, Lightning's Girl, In Our Time...

    I think Nancy was better on singles than albums.
     
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  7. sharedon

    sharedon Forum Zonophone

    Location:
    Boomer OK
    Isn’t it on streaming services like Spotify?
    Drummer Man
     
  8. Tina_UK

    Tina_UK Forum Resident

    Location:
    England
    As I get older, and have learned more about Nancy Sinatra , and even met her a few years go, have grown to appreciate Nancys’ style and music , I especially love her with Lee Hazlewood. She has a marvellous range, and deserves more recognition.

    Nancys’ music, like her Fathers is timeless.
     
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  9. Dbrow

    Dbrow Active Member

    Location:
    Ontario
    Anyone confirm source for these reissues? I assume digital since it LITA.
     
  10. Porkpie

    Porkpie Forum Resident

    Location:
    UK
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  11. Joe Shlabotnik

    Joe Shlabotnik Formerly dickvin

    Location:
    Raleigh, NC
    I do hope the LITA releases continue. I really want that One For Your Dreams book from Nailor Wills Publishing. She published pics of her signing copies a few months back.
     
  12. pghmusiclover

    pghmusiclover Senior Member

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  13. lou a

    lou a Forum Resident

    So is that book now available?
    I just checked and One For Your Dreams is listed as a future release. Judging by the prices of some of the books listed there, it will out of reach for me.
     
    Last edited: May 10, 2023
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  14. Joe Shlabotnik

    Joe Shlabotnik Formerly dickvin

    Location:
    Raleigh, NC
    It's still listed as future" on their website. There are going to be three editions available including a standard unsigned non-premium one. I emailed them for info way back when they first announced it and they replied that Nancy insisted on a standard edition being available too. Not sure what "standard" pricing will be, but it looks to be there will be editions available below that deluxe Nat King Cole book price-wise.
     
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  15. For a singer of whom her dad Frank said "She couldn't carry a tune in a bucket" I think Nancy is great. I've been picking up all the multi-coloured vinyl reissues.

    I saw her live in London a few years ago but when she got to the bit in "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" where she does a fancy bit of footwork in the "Movin' With Nancy" DVD she did show her age a bit as she hobbled back and forth across the stage. I'm being mean there because in every other respect she performed really well.
     
  16. Joe Shlabotnik

    Joe Shlabotnik Formerly dickvin

    Location:
    Raleigh, NC
    The One For Your Dreams deluxe edition is up for presale in her boutique. Looks like a gorgeous book & package but $500 is a little much for my budget. I'll wait for the standard edition in the fall.

    Nancy Sinatra's BOOTIQUE
     
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  17. Boltman92124

    Boltman92124 Go Padres!!

    Location:
    San Diego
    I see there's a red version of Boots. I have the Yellow LIA. It is a nice recording/pressing.
     
  18. lou a

    lou a Forum Resident

    As time passes, I wonder if we will see any further releases from LITA.
     
  19. pghmusiclover

    pghmusiclover Senior Member

    It took two years to have four albums released, so I am going to sit patiently and await word of more releases!
     
    lou a likes this.
  20. JayNYC

    JayNYC Chase that sound

    Location:
    Miami Beach
    The “Start Walkin’” compilation was released 24/44.1 vs “Nancy & Lee” was released 24/96. vs “Nancy & Lee Again” was released 24/44.1

    Anybody have insights of the why different sample rates ?
     
  21. Porkpie

    Porkpie Forum Resident

    Location:
    UK
    Looks like the reissue campaign is continuing!

    Check her instagram for a new post, no text, just a blurred image of the Sugar album…
     
  22. FJFP

    FJFP Host for the 'Mixology' Mix Differences Podcast Thread Starter

    The first LP issue of the album without the ‘soft’ layer over the image! Might have to pick this one up (also because it’s my favourite Nancy LP).
     
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  23. DM333

    DM333 Forum Resident

    Location:
    United Kingdom
    This is good news, I’m loving these reissues!
     
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  24. pghmusiclover

    pghmusiclover Senior Member

    :o
    I saw that and thought something must be happening with that album!

    Incidentally, my parents would not let me buy that album because of the cover showcasing her cleavage — I was 8 when it was released! Maybe I would have turned out to be straight if only they allowed me to get that album lol :D

    Times sure have changed!
     
    Last edited: Aug 23, 2023
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  25. Innocent Smith

    Innocent Smith Always crashing in the same car

    Location:
    Minnesota, USA
    Looks like a new comp is coming.


    [​IMG]
    Nancy Sinatra
    Keep Walkin’: Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978
    Light In The Attic
    LITA 208
    BUYING OPTIONS
    Release Notes
    • Double LP available on Standard Black Wax plus Special Limited Color Editions
    • Definitive collection of Nancy’s rare singles, demos and previously unreleased cuts
    • Includes 3 previously unreleased tracks, plus 3 tracks making their vinyl debut
    • Deep booklet includes new Q&As with Nancy & Don Randi (The Wrecking Crew) – both conducted by GRAMMY®-nominated co-producer Hunter Lea PLUS never-before-seen photos from Nancy Sinatra’s personal archive
    • Features audio freshly remastered from the original analog tapes by GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin
    • Vinyl pressed at RTI
    • Double LP housed in a gatefold jacket with 24-page book
    • CD includes 40-page booklet
    • 8-Track available on Pink, Yellow, Blue or White (Randomly selected)
    • Due to limited capacity the full track-list is not included on the 8-Track

    • Vinyl Color Editions include:

    • Light in the Attic Color Edition – Pressed on Zodiac Blue Wax
      (image #2 below)

    • Highway Song Edition – Pressed on Yellow Wax
      (image #3 below)
    Available: Sept. 29, 2023

    Light in the Attic continues to celebrate the influential career of singer, actress, activist, and icon Nancy Sinatra with a captivating new collection, Keep Walkin’: Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978. Exploring the lesser-known gems from Sinatra’s rich catalog through 25 B-sides, rare singles, covers, demos, and previously-unreleased recordings, Keep Walkin’ was remastered by the GRAMMY®-nominated engineer John Baldwin and available in a variety of formats, including vinyl, CD, 8-track, and digital.

    The 2-LP set, pressed at Record Technology, Inc. (RTI), is presented in an expanded gatefold jacket and accompanied by a 24-page booklet (also included in the CD edition as a 40-page booklet), featuring an array of photos from the artist’s personal collection, as well as a new in-depth Q&A with Sinatra, conducted by the reissue’s GRAMMY®-nominated co-producer, Hunter Lea. The booklet also contains a fascinating interview with keyboardist Don Randi (The Wrecking Crew), who recently spoke to Lea about his hit-filled career and his 50 years of work with Nancy. In addition to the classic black vinyl pressing, a selection of colorful variants can be found exclusively at NancySinatra.com, LightInTheAttic.net, independent record stores, and select online retailers, while limited-edition merchandise, including apparel, accessories, and more are also available at Nancy’s Bootique at NancySinatra.com.

    Keep Walkin’: Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978 serves as a companion to the widely-acclaimed 2021 career-spanning retrospective, Start Walkin’ 1965-1976, and marks the latest release in LITA’s ongoing Nancy Sinatra Archival Series, a partnership with the legendary artist, which honors her musical legacy through lovingly curated reissues (including her 1966 debut, Boots and the 1968 classic, Nancy & Lee), limited-edition merch, and other special releases.

    More on Keep Walkin’: Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978:

    In 1965, 25-year-old Nancy Sinatra scored her first No.1 hit with “These Boots are Made for Walkin’,” a bold anthem for female empowerment. Brazen, sassy, and utterly infectious, it was a reintroduction of sorts for the eldest daughter of Frank Sinatra, who had been struggling to find a spotlight of her own amid a changing musical landscape. Suddenly, audiences who had initially brushed off Sinatra as too demure or out-of-touch were paying attention. Written and produced by Oklahoma-born songsmith Lee Hazlewood (with swaggering instrumentals, courtesy of Billy Strange and The Wrecking Crew), the song launched the singer’s career, as well as one of music’s most unlikely, yet compelling, creative partnerships.

    Over the next decade, Sinatra continued to notch multiple hits on both sides of the Atlantic, including “Sugar Town,” “How Does That Grab You, Darlin?,” and a haunting rendition of the Sonny Bono-penned “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down).” The singer also paired up with Hazlewood for a series of popular duets (“Summer Wine,” “Jackson,” and “Some Velvet Morning”) and collaborative albums. In between best-selling LPs like Boots (1966), How Does That Grab You (1966), and Nancy & Lee (1968), Sinatra performed the theme song to the 1967 James Bond film, You Only Live Twice, and collaborated with her father on the global chart-topper, “Somethin’ Stupid.”

    While these career landmarks are well-documented in the annals of pop culture history, however, much of Sinatra’s catalog remains sorely overlooked. As Keep Walkin’ co-producer Hunter Lea explains, “With the changing taste of the record-buying public in the late 1960s and the counterculture taking over, artists like Nancy Sinatra weren’t in the mainstream as they once were.” Despite that fact, “[Sinatra] kept working, recording, and performing at a voracious pace.”

    Lea continues, “This compilation is a celebration of some of the many glorious recordings that may have been overlooked, forgotten, or never even released at the time. The obscurity of some of these recordings doesn’t mask the genius, brilliance, and effort that went into them; on the contrary, it’s incredible to learn that some of the lost gems are just as rich as the national treasures.”

    Among the highlights is the spritely opener “The City Never Sleeps at Night,” which served as the B-Side to “These Boots Were Made for Walkin’.” Overshadowed by the colossal success of its A-side, it’s no surprise that the cinematic tune never had its proper due. Yet, Lea reveals, Hazlewood initially intended to make it the focus single. Another long-lost B-side is “The Last of the Secret Agents?,” which was paired with the Top 10 hit, “How Does That Grab You, Darlin’?” The playful song, written by Hazlewood, served as the theme to the 1966 comedy of the same name, in which Sinatra co-starred alongside Marty Allen and Steve Rossi.

    Keep Walkin’ also features several choice A-sides that were never included on albums and were overlooked for one reason or another. Among them is 1966’s “In Our Time,” a rebellious anthem for ‘60s youth, which references drug culture and women’s liberation, among other topics. Speaking to the Hazlewood-penned track, Sinatra recalls, “That was a fun song. Lee was starting to do his ‘anti’ stuff. He was cynical and it showed in his writing at some point.” But, despite the themes of the song, Nancy laments that she was never embraced by the counterculture. “[drugs] knocked me out of the picture completely. I was so far removed from the hip people in those days. I think they probably made fun of my stuff.” Another stylistic departure for both artists is “Love Eyes,” a bluesy, soulful single from 1966. The song, Nancy shares, is “one of my favorites. I think what helped Lee’s writing at that point was the bigger sound.… I really love it. I think it holds up to this day.” She adds that her dreamy vocal performance was inspired by early female R&B stars like Ruth Brown and LaVern Baker.

    The collection also features several outstanding covers, including a previously-unreleased rendition of the Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil classic, “I Just Can’t Help Believing” (a hit for both B.J. Thomas and Elvis Presley). This 1978 recording, reimagined as a duet, marked one of Sinatra’s brief reunions with Hazlewood, following his abrupt move to Sweden not long after 1972’s Nancy & Lee Again. Another choice track finds Nancy interpreting Neil Diamond’s “Glory Road.” Released as a single in 1971, it features one of the singer’s most cherished vocal performances. “After I worked on my voice and improved as a performer and as a singer, I embraced Neil Diamond. Anything I did by Neil Diamond, to me, is my best work.”

    Nancy also looks back fondly on her moving rendition of Bill Withers’ “Ain’t No Sunshine,” released in 1973 as the B-side to “Sugar Me.” The recording (which features particularly lush orchestral arrangements by Billy Strange) reunited Nancy with another close collaborator, Jimmy Bowen, who produced the singer in the early ‘60s and later introduced her to Hazlewood. “I love Jimmy,” she declares. “The records we did early on…had a depth to them that I appreciated. He heard me and saw me in a different light; he saw me as a much more serious performer, which I appreciated.”

    Listeners will also be delighted to hear a pair of previously-unreleased demos: “Something Pretty” (the 1968 country hit, made famous by Wynn Stewart) and the theme to the 1965 Richard Rogers/Stephen Sondheim musical, Do I Hear a Waltz?, both of which were intended for a self-described “disco” record. Despite the two catchy takes featured on Keep Walkin’, Sinatra calls the shelved album “A disaster. I called it the disco fiasco!”

    Offering additional insight into Sinatra’s career is music director, songwriter, and keyboardist, Don Randi. A member of the hallowed Wrecking Crew collective, Randi was one of the most prolific session musicians of the ‘60s and ‘70s with hundreds of credits to his name, including The Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations,” Linda Ronstadt’s “Different Drum,” and “These Boots are Made For Walkin’” – his first recording with Sinatra. For the next fifty years, he would be a fixture at her sessions and live shows. He also appears on nearly every track in this collection.

    Speaking to Lea, Randi delves deep into his time with Sinatra, with a palpable admiration for the singer. “She was easy to work with,” he shares. “She was always wonderful to musicians; nobody even comes close.” The keyboardist, who met Sinatra through Hazlewood, also recalls the magic of that partnership. “I always liked working with Nancy & Lee. They had something very special that they could get out of each other. It was a good team.”

    He continues, “Sinatra stood up for herself [around Lee]…He could be so cantankerous…but that’s Lee…. [Nancy] saw through it. She was so lovely and helpful to him a number of times when he really needed someone to talk to.” That said, Randi also appreciates the power of Sinatra’s solo performances. “I never thought she really needed [Hazlewood},” he reveals. “I thought her shows were just as well with everybody else; they were excellent.”

    After stepping back from the industry in the ‘70s to focus on her young family, Sinatra returned to the spotlight in the mid-90s, releasing a string of new albums, including the star-studded Nancy Sinatra, which paired the artist with some of her biggest fans, including Morrissey, U2, Calexico, and Sonic Youth. Since then, Nancy’s legacy has only continued to grow. In more recent years, her impact has been recognized by the likes of Pitchfork, NPR, and Rolling Stone, while in 2020, “Boots” was inducted into the GRAMMY® Hall of Fame. Today, Sinatra remains a force in the industry, as new generations discover her influential catalog, which boasts nearly 20 studio albums and dozens of charting singles.

    Listen
    1. The City Never Sleeps At Night
    2. The Last Of The Secret Agents
    3. My Baby Cried All Night Long
    4. Shades
    5. In Our Time
    6. Love Eyes
    7. Rockin' Rock and Roll (1st TIME ON VINYL)
    8. This Town
    9. Tony Rome
    10. 100 Years
    11. See The Little Children
    12. Something Pretty (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED)
    13. Do I Hear A Waltz (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED)
    14. Drummer Man
    15. Zodiac Blues (1st TIME ON VINYL)
    16. Highway Song
    17. Are You Growing Tired Of My Love
    18. Flowers In The Rain
    19. Glory Road
    20. Ain't No Sunshine
    21. Easy Evil (1st TIME ON VINYL)
    22. Sugar Me
    23. Kinky Love
    24. Dolly and Hawkeye
    25. I Just Can't Help Believing (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED)
     

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