Bit of a subjective question!
Sinatra himself referred to George Jones as 'second-best' in the world (sources are ambiguous about whether he said 'white' or 'male' along with that), reserving top spot not for himself, as many wrongly-assume, but for Tony Bennett.
I will leave it at that. There are lots of articles written on comparisons between the singers, lots of forums etc. I encourage you to read them if you are interested.
It is a tough call, and they were both brilliant.
Veronica Bennett, Estelle Bennett, and Nedra Talley are the voice actresses who do their singing.
Frank Sinatra sang it but there are many other Italian artists who have sang it. Frank it just one of them. Umberto Tozzi sings it with a raw sexy voice
some people are just born with great voices while others are not.but if u want u can try voice warm ups to help your voice(but not to become better)
Because Verina encouraged you to try better.
Sinatra
Sinatra
Frank Sinatra
The Voice of Frank Sinatra was created on 1946-03-04.
Frank Sinatra
Singers known for performing New York New York are Liza Minnelli, Frank Sinatra, and Tony Bennett.
Frank Sinatra The Voice of Our Time - 1990 TV was released on: USA: 1990
Biography - 1987 Frank Sinatra The Voice of the Century was released on: USA: 5 June 1998
Jeff bennett
Sinatra called Sammy "Smokey", because of his constant smoking and his "smoker's voice".
Frank Sinatra held Tony Bennett in high regard, often praising him as one of the best interpreters of song. Sinatra admired Bennett's vocal ability and artistry, considering him a gifted performer who brought emotion and authenticity to his music. Their mutual respect was evident, and Sinatra even referred to Bennett as a "great singer." Their camaraderie exemplified a deep appreciation for each other's talents in the world of music.
The voice of Frank Sinatra. It's our song. So we love it too. Very rare to hear it anymore. Even better is that Ella Fitzgerald did it, but I can't seem to fina CD version of it.
Voice type: baritone, From d2 to a flat4, 2.5 octaves