Come Swing with Me!

Come Swing with Me! is the twenty-sixth studio album of Frank Sinatra. It was arranged primarily by Billy May and was released under Capitol Records in 1961. Come Swing with Me! is Sinatra's second-to-last Capitol album before signing on to Reprise Records, second to Point of No Return.

Track listing

 * 1) "Day by Day" (Axel Stordahl, Paul Weston, Sammy Cahn) – 2:39
 * 2) "Sentimental Journey" (Les Brown, Ben Homer, Bud Green) – 3:26
 * 3) "Almost Like Being in Love" (Frederick Loewe, Alan Jay Lerner) – 2:02
 * 4) "Five Minutes More" (Cahn, Jule Styne) – 2:36
 * 5) "American Beauty Rose" (Mack David, Redd Evans, Arthur Altman) – 2:22
 * 6) "Yes Indeed!" (Sy Oliver) – 2:35
 * 7) "On the Sunny Side of the Street" (Jimmy McHugh, Dorothy Fields) – 2:42
 * 8) "Don't Take Your Love from Me" (Henry Nemo) – 1:59
 * 9) "That Old Black Magic" (Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer) – 4:05
 * 10) "Lover" (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) – 1:53
 * 11) "Paper Doll" (Johnny S. Black) – 2:08
 * 12) "I've Heard That Song Before" (Cahn, Styne) – 2:33
 * CD Bonus tracks:
 * 1) "I Love You" (H. Thompson, H. Archer) – 2:28
 * 2) "Why Should I Cry over You?" (N. Miller, C. Conn) – 2:42
 * 3) "How Could You Do a Thing Like That to Me" (T. Glenn, A. Roberts) – 2:44
 * 4) "River, Stay 'Way From My Door" (Harry M. Woods, Mort Dixon) – 2:38
 * 5) "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" (Arlen, Ted Koehler) – 2:59

Singles
Several songs from Come Swing with Me! were released as singles. 1961 brought two songs from the album, "American Beauty Rose" and "Sentimental Journey," to the charts and these songs were released together as an A/B side single. In 1962, "Five Minutes More" was released as a B-side single with the song "I'll Remember April." "Five Minutes More" was later released along with the song "I Love Paris;" this was Sinatra's final single to be released under Capitol Records.

Reception
Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic claims that Come Swing with Me! lies "somewhere between the carefree Come Fly with Me and the hard-swinging Come Dance with Me!." Though "Sinatra was also recording I Remember Tommy for Reprise and his affections were with his new label," Erlewine insists that this "intense, speedy energy gives the album an edge that distinguishes the record."