#84: The World We Knew by Frank Sinatra
City: Montreal, PQ
Radio Station: CJMS
Peak Month: September 1967
Peak Position in Montreal ~ #2
Peak position in Vancouver ~ did not chart
Peak Position on Billboard Hot 100 ~ #30
YouTube: “The World We Knew”
Lyrics: “The World We Knew”
Francis Albert Sinatra was born in 1915 in Hoboken, NJ. Sinatra spent much time at his parents’ tavern in Hoboken, working on his homework and occasionally singing for spare change. After leaving school before graduating, Sinatra began performing in local Hoboken social clubs and sang for free on radio stations such as WAAT in Jersey City. In New York, Sinatra found jobs singing for his supper or for cigarettes. He got his first break in 1935 when his mother persuaded a local singing group called the 3 Flashes to let him join. Baritone Fred Tamburro stated that “Frank hung around us like we were gods or something”, admitting that they only took him on board because he owned a car and could chauffeur the group around. Sinatra soon learned they were auditioning for the Major Bowes Amateur Hour show, and “begged” the group to let him in on the act. With Sinatra, the group became known as the Hoboken Four, and passed an audition from Edward Bowes to appear on the show. They each earned $12.50, and ended up attracting 40,000 votes to win first prize—a six-month contract to perform on stage and radio across the U.S. Sinatra quickly became the group’s lead singer, and, much to the jealousy of his fellow group members, garnered most of the attention from girls.
In 1938, Sinatra found employment as a singing waiter at a roadhouse called “The Rustic Cabin” in Englewood Cliffs, on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River, facing Manhattan. The roadhouse was connected to WNEW in New York City, and the Dance Parade show was broadcast live on the station from The Rustic Cabin. In 1939, Frank Sinatra had a #21 hit on the US pop charts titled “It’s Funny To Everyone But Me”, backed by the Harry James Orchestra. In 1940, Sinatra recorded his first Top Ten record titled “All or Nothing at All”, which reached #2 in 1943. In 1944, “I’ll Be Seeing You” peaked at #4 on the Billboard pop charts.
During WWII, Frank Sinatra was a regular in the Top Ten. His hits include from 1940: “I’ll Never Smile Again” (#1) with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra; “We Three (My Echo, My Shadow and Me)” (#3), and “Our Love Affair” (#5); From 1941: “Dolores” (#1), “Do I Worry?” (#4) and “This Love Of Mine” (#3); From 1942: “In The Blue Of the Evening” (#1), “There Are Such Things” (#1), and “Take Me” (#5); From 1943: “It’s Always You” (#3), “You’ll Never Know” (#2), and “People Will Say We’re In Love”; From 1944: “I Couldn’t Sleep a Wink Last Night” (#4) and “Saturday Night (Is the Loneliest Night in the Week)” (#2); And from 1945: “I Dream of You (More Than You Dream I Do)” (#7), “Dream” (#5) and “Nancy (with the Laughing Face)” (#10).
In 1943, Frank Sinatra was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song for “I Couldn’t Sleep a Wink Last Night” from Higher and Higher, but lost to “Swinging On A Star”. The following year, Sinatra was nominated again in the Best Original Song category for “I Fall in Love Too Easily” from the film Anchors Aweigh.
In the last half of the 1940s, Frank Sinatra continued to be popular on the pop charts. This includes from 1946: “Oh! What it Seemed to Be” (#1), “Day by Day” (#5), “They Say It’s Wonderful” (#2), “The Coffee Song” (#6), and “Five Minutes More” (#1); From 1947: “Mam’selle” (#1); From 1948: “Nature Boy” (#8); And from 1949: “Some Enchanted Evening” (#6) and “Don’t Cry Joe” (#9). In 1946, Sinatra was awarded an Honorary Award at the Academy Awards for “The House I Live In”, the theme song for The House I Live In.
In 1950, Sinatra had another three Top Ten hits, with his version of “Goodnight Irene” climbing to #5. Into the 1950s, Frank Sinatra’s recordings on Columbia Records became less successful. However, from 1950 to 1952, he hosted The Frank Sinatra Show on CBS. The singer switched labels in early 1953 and he was signed to Capitol Records. His first release was “I’m Walking Behind You” which peaked at #7. In 1954, he won an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor for From Here to Eternity. In 1954, Sinatra’s “Young At Heart” reached #2, and “Three Coins In The Fountain” made it to #4 in the USA and #1 in the UK. In the case of the latter, his recording was featured in the film Three Coins in the Fountain won him an Academy Award for Best Original Song.
While in 1955, “Learnin’ The Blues” topped the pop charts, and “Love and Marriage” and “(Love is) The Tender Trap” (from the film of the same name) both cracked the Top Ten. That year Sinatra appeared in The Man with the Golden Arm, which earned him another Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. But he lost out to Ernest Borgnine who won for his role in Marty. Sinatra was also recognized for his role in the film with a Best Actor nomination at the BAFTA (British Academy Film Awards) in 1957. He was also nominated in the Best Actor category for his role in Not as a Stranger in 1956. Sinatra also appeared in the 1955 Academy Award nominated film Guys and Dolls.
Despite the headwinds of rock ‘n roll, Sinatra managed a few more Top Ten hits through the mid-50s including “Hey! Jealous Lover” (#3) in 1956. He also appeared in the Academy Award nominated films High Society and Around the World in 80 Days.
In 1957, All The Way” peaked at #2, a tune from the film The Joker is Wild. The song earned him his second Best Original Song Academy Award. In 2003, he was posthumously awarded a Grammy Award in the Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals in a duet of “All The Way” with Celine Dion. In late 1957, Sinatra released “Witchcraft”.
As well, Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. The album won him a Grammy Award in the Best Recording Package category. In 1957, Sinatra won a Golden Globe Award for his role in Pal Joey. As well, Sinatra was on ABC hosting The Frank Sinatra Show from October ’57 to June ’58. In 1958, Frank Sinatra appeared in the Academy Award nominated film Some Came Running. In 1959, the singer also released the single “French Foreign Legion”.
In late 1959, at the 2nd Grammy Awards, Sinatra won Grammy Awards for Album of the Year and in the Vocal – Male categories for Come Dance with Me! In 1960, Frank Sinatra won his third Best Original Song Academy Award for “High Hopes” from the film A Hole in the Head. The song received a Grammy Award nomination for Record of the Year. It peaked at #6 on the UK Pop Singles chart.
In late 1959, Sinatra also released a single titled “Talk To Me”. In 1960, Sinatra appeared in the Academy Award nominated film Can-Can. In 1961, Sinatra received four Grammy Award nominations for the single, “Nice ‘n’ Easy”, and one for Album of the Year for Nice ‘n’ Easy.
In 1962, Sinatra received another Grammy Award for “The Second Time Around” for Record of the Year. That year he appeared in the Academy Award nominated film The Manchurian Candidate. In 1963, Frank Sinatra received a Best Actor nomination at the Golden Globe Awards for his role in the comedy film Come Blow Your Horn. At the April 8, 1963, 35th Academy Awards, Frank Sinatra was the host of the event.
In 1966, Sinatra won a Grammy Award for Best Vocal Performance, Male for “It Was A Very Good Year”. The song topped the Adult Contemporary chart in the USA. As well, he won a Grammy Award for Album of the Year for September of My Years. In 1966, Frank Sinatra had a comeback with “Strangers In The Night” which reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. In 1967, he won a Grammy Award for the song in both categories Best Vocal Performance, Male, and Record of the Year. He also won an Album of the year Grammy Award for A Man And His Music.
He followed up with three more Top 30 hits: “Summer Wind” (#25) which was a #1 Adult Contemporary chart hit, “That’s Life” (#4) which was another #1 Adult Contemporary chart hit, and “Something Stupid” in a number-one duet on the Hot 100 with his daughter Nancy Sinatra. The latter recording earned Frank and Nancy Sinatra a Grammy nomination for Record of the Year. In 1967, Frank Sinatra had his sixth consecutive number-one hit on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart with “The World We Knew (Over And Over)”.
“The World We Knew” is a song depicting the bright horizon a couple shared when they “walked beside” each other. There was so much potential, it was “unbelievable.” The narrator sings “… every bright neon sign turned into stars, and the sun and the moon seemed to be ours. Each road that we took turned into gold.” However, the path the couple were on was unsustainable. One person in the relationship was not up for the promise of what could have been: “But the dream was too much for you to hold.”
“The World We Knew” was cowritten by Bert Kaempfert, Carl Sigmar, and Herbert Rehbein.
In 1923, Berthold Heinrich Kaempfert was born in a village suburb of Hamburg, Germany, called Barmbeck. He learned piano, clarinet, accordion and saxophone during his childhood and youth. He had years of private music lessons at Wilhelm Witt’s private music school in Wilhelmsburg. He later studied at Die Musikschule HAMBURG (Hamburg School of Music). Kaempfert’s career began when his mother used a $285 insurance payment to buy a piano. Prior to the outbreak of World War II, while still 15 years of age, Kaempfert was hired to play with Hans Busch and his Orchestra. He was the youngest member of the band. But once Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, Kaempfert, along with all able-bodied young men, were drafted into the German military. Kaempfert became a bandsman in the German Navy, initially playing on the Island of Salt on the Wadden Sea. In 1945, Kaempfert formed a band comprised of prisoners-of-war in Denmark. After the war ended, Kaempfert moved back to Hamburg. He was employed at the Esplanade Hotel and his performances were broadcast at the nearby British Forces Network. In 1959 Bert Kaempfert arranged and produced Die Gitarre und das Meer (The guitar and the sea) for Austrian Freddy Quinn. Quinn had recorded a German-language version of Dean Martin’s big hit in 1955, “Memories Are Made of This.” In 1959 Bert Kaempfert arranged and produced Die Gitarre und das Meer was a big seller in Germany in 1959.
In 1959, Kaempfert collaborated with Croatian Ivo Robic on a single titled “Morgen” (“Tomorrow” in English). The German-language song became an international hit and climbed to #13 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #5 in Vancouver. In 1960, Bert Kaempfert composed “Wonderland By Night.” He was unable to find a German record company to record his single and accompanying album. He pitched his demo in New York City. It was picked up by Decca Records. Kaempfert had his first international hit in 1960 with “Wonderland By Night” that winter. That year he penned “Wooden Heart” a hit for Elvis Presley, and a bigger hit for Joe Dowell in 1961. In early 1962, Bert Kaempfert had a hit single in selected radio markets in North America with “Afrikaan Beat”.
Bert Kaempfert died of a stroke in 1980. He was posthumously inducted into the America’s Songwriters’ Hall of Fame in 1993.
Carl Sigman was born in 1909 in Brooklyn. In the 1940s he co-wrote “Pennsylvania 6-5000” for Glenn Miller, and “Crazy He Calls Me” for Billie Holiday in 1949. The song was covered by Dinah Washington, Anita O’Day and many others. In 1957 he wrote the English lyrics for “Till”, derived from the French song “Prière Sans Espoir”. And in 1961 Sigman wrote the English translation for “Et maintenant”, which was rendered “What Now My Love?” Sigman also wrote the Christmas tune “A Marshmallow World”; Vaughan Monroe’s number one hit in 1947, “Ballerina”; a number one hit in 1949 for Mel Tormé titled “Careless Hands”; “Civilization” by the Andrews Sisters and Danny Kaye; “Ebb Tide” for Vic Damone; “It’s All In The Game” for Tommy Edwards in 1951 and a number-one hit in 1958; “Shangri-La” for the Four Coins and “(Where Do I Begin?) Love Story” for Andy Williams in 1970. Sigman died at the age of 91 in 2000.
Herbert “Herb” Rehbein was born in 1922 in Hamburg, Germany. He studied classical violin. At age 19 he was conscripted into the German Army in 1941. However, he was assigned to the music corp and stationed in Crete. He became a prisoner of war in Belgrade until the end of WWII. He became musical director of the Belgrade Radio Orchestra and remained in the position until 1952. He collaborated with Bert Kaempfert on several musical projects, including “Lady” a number-one adult contemporary hit for Jack Jones in 1967. Rehbein won the competition to provide the Olympic Fanfare for the Summer Olympics in Munich in 1972. He died of cancer at the age of 57 in 1979.
“The World We Knew” peaked at #2 in Hull (PQ), #3 in Montreal, and Enid (OK), #4 in Reading (PA), and Toledo (OH), #6 in Harrisburg (PA), Battle Creek (MI), and Wilkes-Barre (PA), #7 in San Francisco, #8 in Lancaster (PA), #9 in Pointe Claire (PQ), and Saginaw (MI), and #13 in Toronto.
In 1968, Sinatra received two Grammy Award nominations for Francis Albert Sinatra & Antônio Carlos Jobim in both categories Best Vocal Performance – Male, and Album of the Year.
In 1970, Frank Sinatra earned a Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Vocal Performance – Male for “My Way”. And in 1997, he received a second Grammy nomination for “My Way” in the Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals in a duet with Luciano Pavarotti.
His final Top 40 hit was in 1980 with “Theme From New York, New York” which peaked at #32 in the USA and #4 in the UK. For the recording, he received two Grammy Award nominations for Record of the Year, and in the Best Pop Vocal Performance – Male category.
In addition, Frank Sinatra had charted three holiday singles into the Top 20: “Jingle Bells”, “White Christmas” and “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas”.
Over the decades, Sinatra appeared in over sixty films. In 1970 he received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the Academy Awards for his “outstanding contributions to humanitarian causes.” And in 1971, Sinatra was honoured at the Golden Globe Awards with a Cecile B. DeMile Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 1975, Frank Sinatra co-hosted the 47th Academy Awards on April 8, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles.
In 1995, Frank Sinatra won a Grammy Legend Award. That year he received a Grammy Award nomination in the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance category for the album Duets. Then in 1997 he won a Grammy Award in the same category for the album Duets II.
As well, Frank Sinatra has received three stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. One in the Motion Pictures category (1600 Vine Street), a second in the Recording category (1637 Vine Street), and a third in Television (6538 Hollywood Blvd). Over the decades, Frank Sinatra appeared in concert in Canada on occasions. This includes appearances in Calgary, Gander (NL), Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa, Stephenville (NL), Toronto and Vancouver.
Over the decades, Sinatra appeared in over sixty films. In 1998, Frank Sinatra died at the age of 82.
April 21, 2025
Ray McGinnis
References:
“Frank Sinatra Obituary,” BBC, May 16, 1998.
Tony Oppedisano, Sinatra and Me: In the Wee Small Hours, (Scribner, 2021).
Kitty Kelley, His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra, (Bantam, 2010).
Robert Sullivan, Remembering Sinatra: A Life in Pictures, (Time Life Education, 1998).
Charles L. Granata with Nancy Sinatra, Sessions with Sinatra: Frank Sinatra and the Art of Recording, (Chicago Review Press, 2003).
“Frank Sinatra – Concert dates – Canada,” setlist.fm.
Michael Pitts and Frank Hoffman, The Rise of the Crooners, (Scarecrow, 2002).
“Bert Kaempfert bio,” Bert Kaempfert website.
Douglas Martin, “Carl Sigman, 91, Songsmith Who Made Generations Hum,” New York Times, September 30, 2000.
“Herb Rehbein Biography,” Songwriters Hall of Fame, 1993.
CJMS 1280-AM Montreal (PQ) Top 20 | September 10, 1967
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