OMG, that Variety article TOTALLY buries the lede - namely that this new deluxe reissue provides both the original mono mix and a spectacular fresh stereo mix straight from the original 3 track, plus damn near 20 minutes of Sinatra working on "Angel Eyes" from the opening session of four that produced the final product. Sinatra alternates are quite often worth listening to in sequence, because every one is different. None are ever better than the ones that were chosen for release, but the process...my god, the whole "was Sinatra a jazz singer?" thing is stupid, really stupid, but he tries different things - significantly different things - every take until he finds his zone. The element of improvisation might not be core to him, because he wasn't somebody who could just let it flow every time out and have it land, but he definitely was not afraid to "improvise" - interpretational improvisations, some major, some very subtle - in search of a perfect take, a truly perfect take. On "Angel Eyes" he got one, but not at this session, and it's fascinating to hear the preliminary evolutions that eventually got it there. Plus, the arrangement has a nice, almost creepy into that was cut for final release. Who knew?
For me, this is a landmark record (and lucky me, I only reallys tarted paying attention to it not too much more than a decade ago, so it's not yet gotten all Pete Hammil-ed to me), and hearing it fleshed out like this (and in the case of the stereo mix, opened and cleared up) is a true delight. The "Lush Life" buzz is a troll for the clueless. The meat is in the original album and the "Angel Eyes" saga.
Have fun, you happy people.