Frankie Laine sings Come Back To Me
Uploader Comments (rphull)
Top Comments
-
You are right he is a legend. There will never be another person even close to Frankie Lane. When he sang this time you gave me mountain and had tears in his eyes at the end of the song, shows the emotion he puts into his songs. He is a true legend.
-
The lyrics are tough to sing yet Frankie made it look easy. A class act.
All Comments (27)
-
Wow, Frankie Laine was great on this ditty ... loved it ... great post, too, thank you!
-
BRAVO, BRAVO! :D
-
How blessed I am to share a birthday with Mr. Laine. (Uh-uh, not the same year, LOLOLOL).
-
In a Rolls or a Van, anyway that you can,,... Frankie, come back to me
-
@rphull Up until about age 85 Frankie's voice was still strong and impressive. I can't think of another singer who sounded as good at such an age. I saw Ed Ames on a PBS special just shy of birthday number 80 and he sounded great. Perhaps he will carry on in the Laine tradition. As regards the song here, Steve and Eydie had the best selling recording on this one.
-
sweet.
-
I prefer Sinatra's version. It has more authority.
No big complaints here though.
-
Endless! I guess I believe..
-
stunning,fabulous, romantic, and glamorous voice of Frankie Lane
-
ALAN JAY LERNER must be the greatest lyricist who ever lived. I did not know that these clever words were his handiwork too. ON TOP OF all that I know that came from him, 'The Street Where You Live' , all of My Fair Lady and the whole book of Camelot. He is like the gift that keeps on giving. 'Atta guy.
When and where was this made?
It looks like Frankie still had it up until near the very end. It's a great performance. Thanks.
Even though he was largely ignored by the media, it's great to see from the video that he was still appearing in classy venues with orchestras and performing in front of ample, appreciative crowds.
highnrising 4 years ago
The clip is from the early 70's from one of Frankie's concerts in Europe. He toured extensively in England and the rest of Europe well into the late 80's. Always attracting large audiences.
rphull 4 years ago