From 1943 to 1946, Sinatra's solo career began to bloom because the singer produced a series of popular singles. Police fan Sinatra, fascinated by his dreamlike baritone, got him nicknames "sound" and "drowsy sultan". "This is an era of war and loneliness is great," Sinatra recalls that he was not suitable for military purposes because he stabbed the tympanic membrane. "I am a boy everywhere in the pharmacy, they have joined the war apart, that's it."
In 1943, Sinatra made a debut with "Reveille with Beverley and Higher and Higher". In 1945, he received the special Oscar of the 10-minute short movie "House I Live" designed to promote racial and religious tolerance within the family. However, the popularity of Sinatra began to decline over the years after the war, and in the early 1950's lost the contract of recording and film. But in 1953 he went back to victory and won the support actor Oscar as he drew Italian-American soldier Maggio classically "from here forever". This was his first non-singing character, but when Sinatra signed a contract with Capitol Records the same year, I found a new voice outlet soon. In the 1950s Sinatra further matched the sound in a jazz change.
After regaining the star, Sinatra has been ongoing success with movies and music over the next few years. He was nominated for Oscar for works as "Golden Armeman" (1955) and gained a good reputation for his performance at the original Manchuria Candidate (1962). At the same time, he is still a powerful chart. When record sales began to decline in the late 1950s, Sinatra left his Capitol and founded his own record company Reprise. In cooperation with Warner Bros. who later acquired the Reprise, Sinatra also established its own independent film production company Artanis.
In 1962, Sinatra released a series of standard folk songs Sinatra and Strings arranged by Don Costa. And it became one of Sinatra's most admired works throughout the Reprise era. Nancy Sinatra told pop singer Frank Sinatra Jr. who was participating in the recording he noticed the "gigantic orchestra" in pop music. "In the same year, Sinatra and Count Basie collaborated the album Sinatra-Basie and encouraged them to join again in the next It Might Be Swing that Quincy Jones did two years later, and they frequently appeared , Appeared in the Newport Jazz Festival in 1965. Also in 1962, as the owner of his own record company, Sinatra, again on the podium, in his third instrumental album Frank Sinatra Conducts drama with pictures I released music
Quincy Jones first partnered with Frank Sinatra in 1958 when Grace Grace invited him to arrange a charity concert at the Monaco Sports Club. Six years later, Sinatra hired him to arrange for Sinatra's second album "Count Basie, It Might as Swing" (1964) and to play. Jones co - starred the singer 's live album with Basie Band' s Sinatra in Sands (1966). In June 1965, Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Johnny Carson collaborated with Basie Orchestra of St. Louis, Missouri, and benefited Dismas House. Fundraising events were airing at movie theaters nationwide, and eventually it was delivered on DVD. In the second half of that year, Jones was Sinalat and Baker's arranger / director who appeared on the Hollywood Palace TV program on October 16, 1965. After 19 years, Sinatra and Jones combined efforts to participate in LA 's My Lady in 1984. Jones said,