Frankie Laine
Frankie Laine was born Francis Albert Sinatra in Chicago in 1913, though he later took his stage name from La Salle Street in that city. He started singing in...
The pages that open this catalog up fastest
These picks surface the stronger lyric pages first instead of dropping you into one endless list.
The fast read
The facts this page is built to carry clearly
Use this page as the public reference for the artist summary, linked lyric pages, and any LyroVerse editor's note on the page. Listener comments remain user-generated context.
Visual archive
Real photos only. No placeholder gallery promo.
Keep moving through Frankie Laine
Archive material and source history
Frankie Laine was born Francis Albert Sinatra in Chicago in 1913, though he later took his stage name from La Salle Street in that city. He started singing in local clubs during the Depression years and eventually joined the Glenn Miller Orchestra in 1943. His real break came after the war, when he signed with Mercury Records in 1946.
His voice had a wide range and a resonant depth that worked across pop, jazz, and country. Songs like "I Believe" and "My Little One" became hits, and his version of "That Lucky Old Sun" and "Mule Train" are still remembered. He recorded over 70 studio albums.
Laine faced some legal battles over contracts and plagiarism claims, but he kept recording.
What this artist page can answer fast
Where should I start with Frankie Laine on LyroVerse?
The Start here section opens with I Believe, Making Memories, and A Woman In Love so you can move through the artist's stronger lyric pages first.
How many lyric pages are live for Frankie Laine?
LyroVerse currently has 50 visible lyric pages for Frankie Laine.
Does Frankie Laine have photos on LyroVerse?
Yes. There are 1 photo available, and the preview gallery on this page links to the full photos section.
Not just lyrics. The conversation around them.
Follow the artist, compare interpretations across songs, and leave corrections that help the catalog stay sharp.
What people are saying
No listener comments on Frankie Laine yet.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.