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ALBUMKeep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978Nancy Sinatra
Albums by Nancy Sinatra
ALBUMKeep Walkin': Singles, Demos & Rarities 1965-1978Nancy Sinatra
ALBUMShifting GearsNancy Sinatra
ALBUMNancy & Lee 3Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
ALBUMCalifornia GirlNancy Sinatra
ALBUMHow Does It Feel?Nancy Sinatra
ALBUMSheet MusicNancy Sinatra
ALBUMOne More TimeNancy Sinatra
ALBUMNancy & Lee AgainNancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
ALBUMWomanNancy Sinatra
ALBUMNancyNancy Sinatra
Nancy Sinatra's Popular Music Videos
These Boots Are Made For Walking (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, February 27, 1966)
Nancy Sinatra
Summer Wine (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, April 16, 1967)
Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
Boots (feat. Nancy Sinatra)
Jynn Cole
I Love Them All (The Boys In The Band) [Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 8, 1970]
Nancy Sinatra
Storybook Children (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 24, 1968)
Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
The Last Of The Secret Agents? (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, May 22, 1966)
Nancy Sinatra
Sugar Town (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, October 30, 1966)
Nancy Sinatra
Sock It To Me Sunshine (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, May 26, 1968)
Nancy Sinatra
California Dreamin' (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, March 8, 1970)
Nancy Sinatra
Hey, Good Lookin' (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, November 17, 1963)
Nancy Sinatra & Tommy Sands
Artist Playlists
Nancy Sinatra Essentials
Her boots were made for pop stardom.
Artist Biography
With her 1965 smash “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,” singer and actress Nancy Sinatra strutted out of her legendary father Frank’s shadow and established a career that has yielded numerous hits over six decades.
• Sinatra’s first professional appearance came in 1960 on her father Frank Sinatra’s TV special welcoming Elvis Presley home from military service in Europe. (She later appeared with Elvis in the 1968 film Speedway.)
• After releasing 11 singles, Nancy Sinatra finally reached the charts with her twelfth, 1965’s “So Long, Babe.” The song peaked at No. 86.
• Her next single was “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’.” Written by Lee Hazlewood, the song reached No. 1 in the US and the UK and was the centerpiece of her first album, Boots. The 1966 LP reached No. 5 in the US and No. 12 in the UK.
• Sinatra had a jam-packed 1967: “Something Stupid,” a duet with her father, was a No. 1 hit on both sides of the Atlantic; she had three Top 40 singles with Hazlewood, including “Jackson” and “Some Velvet Morning”; and she recorded the theme song for the James Bond film You Only Live Twice.
• In 1968, Sinatra and Hazlewood teamed up on Nancy & Lee, the first of three collaborative albums they made together. This one reached No. 13 and yielded the minor hit “Summer Wine.”
• Sinatra’s commercial fortunes dropped off dramatically in the ’70s, when only two of her songs reached the chart. One of them, the 1971 duet with Hazlewood “Did You Ever,” was a No. 2 hit in the UK.
• In 1981 Sinatra made a country album with Mel Tillis. Mel and Nancy spawned the minor country hits “Texas Cowboy Night” and “Play Me or Trade Me.”
• Sinatra released seven solo albums between 1995 and 2013. None of them charted, but her self-titled 2004 album included “Let Me Kiss You,” co-written by the English indie-rock singer Morrissey (her former L.A. neighbor). She and Morrissey each released a version of the song on the same day; hers peaked at No. 46 in the UK.
Hometown
Jersey City, NJ, United States
Genre
Pop