Francis Albert Sinatra was born on December 12, 1915, in Hoboken, New Jersey, to Sicilian immigrant parents. His birth was traumatic — forceps delivery left permanent scars on his cheek and ear and perforated his eardrum — and his mother Dolly, a formidable political organizer and bootlegger's midwife, was the dominant force of his early years. He grew up in a tough neighborhood, was expelled from school for rowdy behavior, and drifted through various jobs before committing entirely to music. He sang in amateur contests, performing with orchestras for room and board, developing the musical intelligence and vocal technique that would make him one of the most recorded artists in history.
Sinatra's first major breakthrough came with Harry James's band in 1939, and he rapidly became the dominant popular vocalist of the early 1940s as a soloist with Tommy Dorsey and then as a solo artist, triggering the phenomenon of bobby-soxer hysteria that prefigured Beatlemania. His career collapsed in the early 1950s amid personal scandal, public feuds, and the collapse of his voice, and Columbia Records dropped him. His resurrection through a supporting role in From Here to Eternity (1953) — for which he won the Academy Award — is one of the most dramatic career comebacks in entertainment history, launching the Capitol Records period that produced his greatest albums.
Sinatra's Capitol years (1953–1961) produced a series of concept albums — Songs for Young Lovers, In the Wee Small Hours, Songs for Swingin' Lovers, Only the Lonely — that are universally regarded as the finest work in the American Songbook tradition. He founded Reprise Records in 1960 to retain artistic control. His leadership of the Rat Pack — with Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop — defined Las Vegas entertainment culture. His ENTJ character is visible throughout: the absolute authority in the recording studio and on stage, the command of the room, the intolerance for anything less than the best from those around him, and the strategic management of his own image and business interests with the same precision he brought to a musical arrangement.
Sinatra gave his retirement concert in 1971 but returned in 1973 and continued performing until 1995, when neurological decline ended his public appearances. He died on May 14, 1998. His influence on popular music is incalculable: he demonstrated that the popular singer could be an interpretive artist of the first order, that the relationship between singer and song could be as complex and revealing as any literary relationship, and that the voice — properly understood, properly developed, properly deployed — could communicate emotional truth with a precision that no other instrument could match.