Search - Artist/Band: Dean Martin

Artist Info

  • Name: Dean Martin
  • Birthday: 06/07/1917
  • Birth Place: Steubenville, OH
  • Died: 12/25/1995
  • Decades Active: 1940,1950,1960,1970,1980,1990,2000
  • Genre: Vocal Music
  • Styles: Traditional Pop, Vocal Pop, AM Pop
  • Moods: Amiable/Good-Natured, Carefree, Confident, Intimate, Laid-Back/Mellow, Relaxed, Soothing, Stylish, Cheerful, Elegant, Gentle, Happy, Lazy, Light, Refined/Mannered, Sentimental, Smooth, Sophisticated, Warm, Fun, Lively, Plaintive, Playful, Poignant, Reserved, Romantic, Springlike, Sweet

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Classic Tracks
  • 12/01/2009
  • 100 Hits Legends
  • 10/13/2009
  • My Kind of Christmas
  • 10/06/2009
  • The TV Show
  • 04/21/2009
  • The Silencers
  • 03/24/2009
  • Amore [Capitol]
  • 01/27/2009
  • Love Songs [Universal]
  • 01/19/2009
  • Volare [Membran]
  • 2009
  • That's Amore: Dean Martin's Greatest Love Songs W
  • 10/07/2008
  • At His Best
  • 01/17/2008
  • A Very Cool Christmas [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]
  • 2008
  • Swingin' with Dean Martin
  • 2008
  • Dino Swings: Selected Singles 1949-56
  • 11/19/2007
  • Encore of Golden Hits W
  • 11/02/2007
  • Forever Dean Martin
  • 09/18/2007
  • Dean Martin, Vol. 1
  • 09/10/2007
  • Dean Martin, Vol. 2
  • 09/10/2007
  • Forever Cool
  • 08/14/2007
  • Signature
  • 06/25/2007
  • Dean Martin [KRB]
  • 05/14/2007
  • Swings
  • 05/01/2007
  • Wine, Women and Golf [Primo]
  • 01/29/2007
  • Ultimate Collection [Red Box]
  • 12/11/2006
  • Chrismas Songs
  • 11/20/2006
  • Superstar Series
  • 11/07/2006
  • That's Amore [Musical Memories]
  • 11/06/2006
  • With Love from Dean Martin WA
  • 10/26/2006
  • Like Never Before
  • 10/03/2006
  • Greatest Hits [Cherished Class]
  • 08/22/2006
  • Memories Are Made of This
  • 06/27/2006
  • Young Dino WA
  • 06/20/2006
  • Very Best of Dean Martin [Balboa]
  • 05/30/2006
  • Legendary Songs [Creative]
  • 05/24/2006
  • Some Enchanted Evening [Creative Sounds]
  • 05/24/2006
  • That's Amore [Entertainers]
  • 05/04/2006
  • Memory Lane
  • 04/25/2006
  • Songs for Lovers
  • 02/07/2006
  • Best of Dean Martin [Direct Source]
  • 01/31/2006
  • You're Nobody Until Somebody Loves You [Falcon]
  • 12/05/2005
  • For Me and My Gal/Memory Lane/Rambling Rose WA
  • 11/29/2005
  • Legend: Best of the Early Years
  • 10/18/2005
  • Platinum Collection
  • 10/11/2005
  • All of Me [Synergy]
  • 08/30/2005
  • Cocktail Hour
  • 08/22/2005
  • Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis
  • 07/04/2005
  • Pop Legends
  • 06/27/2005
  • I'm in Love with You
  • 06/06/2005
  • That's Amore [Recall]
  • 05/31/2005
  • Dean Martin [Country Legends]
  • 04/18/2005
  • Back in Town...: The Very Best
  • 03/09/2005
  • Happy in Love/Dino - Like Never Before WA
  • 2005
  • The Lush Years/Relaxin' WA
  • 2005
  • Who's Sorry Now
  • 12/07/2004
  • Solitaire [Synergy]
  • 11/16/2004
  • Classic Dean
  • 11/01/2004
  • Volare
  • 11/01/2004
  • That's Amore [ASV/Living Era]
  • 10/19/2004
  • A Proper Introduction to Dean Martin: Aw C'mon WA
  • 10/05/2004
  • Christmas with Dino [Capitol 2004] WA
  • 09/21/2004
  • Christmas Songs
  • 08/31/2004
  • Collection [2004]
  • 08/17/2004
  • 70 Classic Performances
  • 07/06/2004
  • Dino: The Essential Dean Martin WA
  • 06/01/2004
  • That's Amore [Prism]
  • 04/27/2004
  • It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas WA
  • 2004
  • Pennies from Heaven
  • 2004
  • Rambling Rose
  • 2004
  • Walkin' My Baby Back Home & I Still Get a Thrill WA
  • 11/25/2003
  • I'll Always Love You WA
  • 09/30/2003
  • Classic American Voices
  • 08/26/2003
  • EMI Comedy: Dean Martin & Jerry Lewis
  • 07/15/2003
  • Essential [EMI]
  • 06/03/2003
  • Shaken, Not Stirred
  • 2003
  • That's Christmas
  • 2003
  • Swingin' with Dino WA
  • 09/24/2002
  • Golden Greats
  • 08/27/2002
  • In the Cool of the Evening
  • 06/25/2002
  • On the Sentimental Side
  • 05/20/2002
  • American Legend
  • 2002
  • Dino/You're the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me WA
  • 2002
  • Gentle on My Mind/I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am WA
  • 2002
  • Happiness Is Dean Martin/Welcome to My World WA
  • 2002
  • My Woman, My Woman, My Wife/For the Good Times WA
  • 2002
  • Sittin' on Top of the World/Once in a While WA
  • 2002
  • Somewhere There's a Someone/The Hit Sound of Dean Martin WA
  • 2002
  • Country Style/Dean 'Tex' Martin Rides Again WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • Dean Martin Hits Again/Houston WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • Dream with Dean/Everybody Loves Somebody WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • French Style/Dino Latino WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • The Dean Martin TV Show/Songs From the Silencers WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • The Door Is Still Open to My Heart/(Remember Me) I'm the One Who Loves You WA
  • 10/23/2001
  • Selection
  • 09/04/2001
  • A Date with Dean [2001]
  • 06/25/2001
  • In an International Mood
  • 05/22/2001
  • The Legends Collection
  • 02/13/2001
  • The Golden Age of Comedy
  • 11/20/2000
  • Love Songs [Mastersound]
  • 11/19/2000
  • Everybody Loves Somebody: 25 Hits
  • 11/10/2000
  • Relax, It's Dean Martin
  • 08/29/2000
  • Song Book
  • 08/15/2000
  • Someone Like You WA
  • 07/18/2000
  • Baby It's Cold Outside
  • 05/23/2000
  • Very Best of Capitol & Reprise
  • 05/23/2000
  • Very Best of Dean Martin: The Capitol & Reprise Years [2000] WA
  • 05/23/2000
  • Some Enchanted Evening [Hallmark]
  • 04/25/2000
  • I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm
  • 03/15/2000
  • Crooners, Vol. 3
  • 2000
  • Dean Martin's Greatest Hits!, Vol. 1 WA
  • 2000
  • Dean Martin's Greatest Hits!, Vol. 2 WA
  • 2000
  • Dean Martin's Greatest Hits!, Vol. 3 WA
  • 2000
  • Dean Martin's Greatest Hits!, Vol. 4 WA
  • 2000
  • That's Amore: The Very Best of Dean Martin
  • 2000
  • Golden Memories
  • 12/17/1999
  • Million and One
  • 09/15/1999
  • Hurtin' Country Songs WA
  • 09/14/1999
  • Late at Night with Dean Martin WA
  • 09/14/1999
  • The Magic Memories
  • 08/31/1999
  • The Legendary Dean Martin
  • 04/27/1999
  • Dino! Italian Love Songs/Cha-Cha de Amor WA
  • 03/27/1999
  • All the Hits: 1964-1969 WA
  • 1999
  • The Collection [Marks & Spencers]
  • 1999
  • The Wonderful Music of Dean Martin
  • 1999
  • The Very Best of Dean Martin, Vol. 1
  • 11/03/1998
  • Country Dino
  • 09/15/1998
  • Dean Martin [Entertainers]
  • 09/15/1998
  • Dean Martin [Goldies]
  • 09/12/1998
  • Greatest Hits [EMI Import]
  • 08/25/1998
  • A Touch of Class
  • 07/21/1998
  • Gold Collection [Retro]
  • 06/30/1998
  • 20 Great Love Songs
  • 06/16/1998
  • Greatest Hits: King of Cool
  • 06/02/1998
  • Making Spirits Bright WA
  • 1998
  • The Long Lost Reprise Hits WA
  • 1998
  • Very Best of Dean Martin: The Capitol & Reprise Years [1998] WA
  • 1998
  • Love Songs by Dean Martin
  • 01/21/1997
  • The Best of Dean Martin [Cema] WA
  • 01/01/1997
  • Memories Are Made of This [Disky #1]
  • 1997
  • Memories Are Made of This [Disky #2]
  • 1997
  • Memories Are Made of This [Disky #3]
  • 1997
  • This Time I'm Swingin'!/Pretty Baby
  • 12/06/1996
  • Little Old Wine Drinker Me
  • 09/09/1996
  • I Wish You Love
  • 08/13/1996
  • Italian Love Songs WA
  • 07/23/1996
  • Capitol Years
  • 06/11/1996
  • You'll Always Be The One I Love WA
  • 01/01/1996
  • That's Amore: The Best of Dean Martin [Capitol] WA
  • 1996
  • Spotlight on Dean Martin [Great Gentlemen of Song]
  • 08/01/1995
  • Solid Gold
  • 04/16/1995
  • The Great Dean Martin, Vol. 2 [Goldies]
  • 1995
  • Dean Martin [Delta]
  • 04/02/1994
  • All the Hits: 1948-1969 WA
  • 1993
  • The Great Dean Martin [Goldies]
  • 1993
  • Collection [Castle] WA
  • 07/01/1992
  • Greatest Hits [Cema]
  • 1992
  • Season's Greetings from Dean Martin WA
  • 1992
  • 24 Golden Hits WA
  • 07/01/1991
  • All-Time Greatest Hits WA
  • 06/04/1991
  • Happy Hour with Dean Martin
  • 10/25/1990
  • Capitol Collectors Series
  • 10/25/1989
  • You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You
  • 1988
  • Dreams & Memories
  • 1983
  • Once in a While
  • 10/20/1978
  • You're the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me
  • 12/14/1973
  • Sittin' on Top of the World
  • 05/29/1973
  • Dino
  • 01/1972
  • For the Good Times
  • 01/1971
  • My Woman, My Woman, My Wife
  • 07/1970
  • I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am
  • 08/1969
  • The Best of Dean Martin, Vol. 2 WA
  • 01/13/1969
  • Gentle on My Mind
  • 11/1968
  • Favorites
  • 09/16/1968
  • Welcome to My World
  • 07/1967
  • Happiness Is Dean Martin
  • 04/1967
  • The Hit Sound of Dean Martin
  • 08/1966
  • Somewhere There's a Someone
  • 02/1966
  • My Christmas Album WA
  • 1966
  • Houston
  • 1965
  • Hey, Brother, Pour the Wine
  • 11/30/1964
  • Everybody Loves Somebody [Golden Stars]
  • 08/04/1964
  • Everybody Loves Somebody [Reprise 2 CD]
  • 08/04/1964
  • The Door Is Still Open to My Heart
  • 1964
  • Country Style
  • 01/14/1963
  • Cha Cha de Amor
  • 11/05/1962
  • Dino! Italian Love Songs WA
  • 02/05/1962
  • French Style WA
  • 1962
  • This Time I'm Swingin'!
  • 10/03/1960
  • A Winter Romance
  • 11/16/1959
  • Sleep Warm WA
  • 03/02/1959
  • This Is Dean Martin
  • 08/25/1958
  • Pretty Baby
  • 06/17/1957
  • Swingin' Down Yonder
  • 08/01/1955
  • 32 Songs for Lovers WA
  • Best of Dean Martin [Timeless]
  • The Essential
  • Individual Bio

    Enjoying great success in music, film, television, and the stage, Dean Martin was less an entertainer than an icon, the eternal essence of cool. A member of the legendary Rat Pack, he lived and died the high life of booze, broads and bright lights, always projecting a sense of utter detachment and serenity; along with Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr. and the other chosen few who breathed the same rarefied air, Martin -- highball and cigarette always firmly in hand -- embodied the glorious excess of a world long gone, a world without rules or consequences. Throughout it all, he remained just outside the radar of understanding, the most distant star in the firmament; as his biographer Nick Tosches once noted, Martin was what the Italians called a menefreghista -- "one who simply does not give a f***."

    Dino Paul Crocetti was born on June 7, 1917 in Steubenville, Ohio; the son of an immigrant barber, he spoke only Italian until the age of five, and at school was the target of much ridicule for his broken English. He ultimately quit school at the age of 16, going to work in the steel mills; as a boxer named Kid Crochet, he also fought a handful of amateur bouts, and later delivered bootleg liquor. After landing a job as a croupier in a local speakeasy, he made his first connections with the underworld, bringing him into contact with club owners all over the Midwest; initially rechristening himself Dean Martini, he had a nose job and set out to become a crooner, modeling himself after his acknowledged idol, Bing Crosby. Hired by bandleader Sammy Watkins, he dropped the second "i" from his stage name and eventually enjoyed minor success on the New York club circuit, winning over audiences with his loose, mellow vocal style.

    Despite his good looks and easygoing charm, Martin's early years as an entertainer were largely unsuccessful. In 1946 -- the year he issued his first single, "Which Way Did My Heart Go?" -- he first met another struggling performer, a comic named Jerry Lewis; later that year, while Lewis was playing Atlantic City's 500 Club, another act abruptly quit the show, and the comedian suggested Martin to fill the void. Initially, the two performed separately, but one night they threw out their routines and teamed on-stage, a Mutt-and-Jeff combo whose wildly improvisational comedy quickly made them a star attraction along the Boardwalk. Within months, Martin and Lewis' salaries rocketed from $350 to $5000 a week, and by the end of the 1940s they were the most popular comedy duo in the nation. In 1949, they made their film debut in My Friend Irma, and their supporting work proved so popular with audiences that their roles were significantly expanded for the sequel, the following year's My Friend Irma Goes West.

    With 1951's At War with the Army, Martin and Lewis earned their first star billing. The picture established the basic formula of all of their subsequent movie work, with Martin the suave straight man forced to suffer the bizarre antics of the manic fool Lewis. Critics often loathed the duo, but audiences couldn't get enough -- in all, they headlined 13 comedies for Paramount, among them 1952's Jumping Jacks, 1953's Scared Stiff and 1955's Artists and Models, a superior effort directed by Frank Tashlin. For 1956's Hollywood or Bust, Tashlin was again in the director's seat, but the movie was the team's last; after Martin and Lewis' relationship soured to the point where they were no longer even speaking to one another, they announced their breakup following the conclusion of their July 25, 1956 performance at the Copacabana, which celebrated to the day the tenth anniversary of their first show.

    While most onlookers predicted continued superstardom for Lewis, the general consensus was that Martin would falter as a solo act; after all, outside of the 1953 smash "That's Amore," his solo singing career had never quite hit its stride, and in light of the continued ascendancy of rock & roll, his future looked dim. After suffering a failure with Ten Thousand Bedrooms, Martin's next move was to appear in the 1958 drama The Young Lions, starring alongside Montgomery Clift and Marlon Brando; that same year he also hosted The Dean Martin Show, the first of his color specials for NBC television. Both projects were successful, as were his live appearances at the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas; in particular, The Young Lions proved him a highly capable dramatic actor. Combined with another hit single, "Volare," Martin was everywhere that year, and with the continued success of his many TV specials, he effectively conquered movies, music, television and the stage all at the same time -- a claim no other entertainer, not even Sinatra, could make.

    Even at the peak of his fame, however, Martin remained strangely contemptuous of stardom; for a man whose presence in the public eye was almost constant, he was utterly elusive, beyond the realm of mortal understanding. As his celebrity and power grew, he slipped even further away: in early 1959, his movie with Sinatra, Some Came Running, hit theaters, and with it came the dawning of the Rat Pack. Together, Sinatra and Martin -- in tandem with their acolytes Sammy Davis, Jr., Peter Lawford, Joey Bishop and Shirley MacLaine -- set new standards of celebrity hipsterdom, becoming avatars of the good life; flexing their muscle not only in show business but also in politics -- their ties to John F. Kennedy, Lawford's brother-in-law and an honorary Rat Packer code-named "Chicky Baby," are now legend -- they were the new American gods, and Las Vegas was their Mount Olympus.

    Martin -- who continued to impress critics in films like the 1959 Howard Hawks classic Rio Bravo -- was Sinatra's right-hand man, the drunkest and most enigmatic member of the Rat Pack (so named in homage to the Holmby Hills Rat Pack, a bygone drinking circle that had once gathered around Humphrey Bogart); his allegiance to Sinatra was total, and Martin even left his longtime label Capitol to record for and financially back Sinatra's own Reprise imprint. In 1960, the Rat Pack starred in Ocean's Eleven, filming in Las Vegas during the day and then taking over the Sands each night; two years later, they reconvened for Sergeants 3. However, in late 1963 -- while filming the third Rat Pack opus, Robin and the Seven Hoods -- the news came that Kennedy had been assassinated; in effect, as America struggled to pick up the pieces, the Rat Pack's reign was over. With Vietnam and the civil rights movement looming on the horizon, there was no longer room for the boozy, happy-go-lucky lifestyle of before -- the fun was truly over.

    Yet somehow Martin forged on; in 1964, at the peak of Beatlemania, he knocked the Fab Four out of the top spot on the charts with his single "Everybody Loves Somebody," and that same year starred in Billy Wilder's acrid Kiss Me, Stupid, a film which crystallized his persona as the lecherous but lovable lush. In 1965, after years of overtures from NBC, Martin finally agreed to host his own weekly variety series; The Dean Martin Show was an enormous hit, running for nine seasons before later spawning a number of hit Celebrity Roast specials during the 1970s. In films, he also remained successful, starring in a series of spy spoofs as secret agent Matt Helm. However, by the late '70s, Martin's health began to fail, and his career was primarily confined to casino club stages; in 1987, his son Dean Paul died in an airplane crash, a blow from which he never recovered. After bailing out of a 1988 reunion tour with Sinatra and Davis, Martin spent his final years in solitude; he died on Christmas Day, 1995. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide

    Member of


    Similar Artists


    See Also


    Influences


    Covered Songs By