Frank Sinatra discography


American vocalist Frank Sinatra has recorded 59 studio albums and 297 singles in his solo career, spanning 54 years. Sinatra signed with Columbia Records in 1943; his debut album The Voice of Frank Sinatra was released in 1946. Sinatra would achieve greater success with Capitol and Reprise Records, the former of which he released his final two albums on—Duets and Duets II. Eight compilation albums under Sinatra's name were released in his lifetime, with more albums released following his death in 1998.

Albums

Studio albums

Columbia Records introduced the LP album on June 21, 1948; prior to that albums were collections of 78s in a booklet resembling a photo album, rarely more than four records to a set. Sinatra's Capitol studio albums were released on Concepts in 1992, and the bulk of his Capitol recordings released on the 1998 album The Capitol Years.
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Compilation albums

Live albums

Albums conducted by Sinatra

Box sets and collections

RCA Records

Singles are listed with B-side immediately succeeding. Where a song is listed as, or, Sinatra does not feature. Number indicates highest chart position on combined Billboard charts.

With the [Tommy Dorsey] Orchestra ([RCA Victor]) (1940–1942)

First solo singles ([Bluebird Records]) (1942)

Columbia">Columbia Records">Columbia singles (1943–1952)

All Orchestras conducted by Axel Stordahl, unless otherwise noted

Capitol">Capitol Records">Capitol singles (1953–1962)

Sinatra's Capitol singles were released on The Complete Capitol Singles Collection. UK Singles Chart positions from 1952 onwards.

Reprise">Reprise Records">Reprise singles (1961–1983)

Sinatra's Reprise singles were released as part of The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings

Qwest">Qwest Records">Qwest singles (1984)

Sinatra's Qwest singles were released as part of The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings, and originally appeared on L.A. Is My Lady.

Island">Island Records">Island singles (1993)

Holiday 100 chart entries

Since many radio stations in the US adopt a format change to Christmas music each December, many holiday hits have an annual spike in popularity during the last few weeks of the year and are retired once the season is over. In December 2011, Billboard began a Holiday Songs chart with 50 positions that monitors the last five weeks of each year to "rank the top holiday hits of all eras using the same methodology as the Hot 100, blending streaming, airplay, and sales data", and in 2013 the number of positions on the chart was doubled, resulting in the Holiday 100. A handful of Sinatra recordings have made appearances on the Holiday 100 and are noted below according to the holiday season in which they charted there.