All My Tomorrows is a 1959 ballad with lyrics by Sammy Cahn and music by Jimmy Van Heusen, written for Frank Sinatra. It was introduced in the film A Hole in the Head, where Sinatra sings it in the opening credits. The song was released as a 1959 single on Capitol Records on the reverse side of High Hopes, with recording completed December 29, 1958 at Capitol Studios in Hollywood. The ballad later appeared on Sinatra’s 1961 album All the Way, and he re-recorded it for the 1969 album My Way in a new arrangement that critics describe as lush and aching, with a melody that nods to Strangers in the Night. The track is a jazz standard ballad about turning one’s life around, often described as the poignant monologue of a man determined to start anew, and it runs about 3 minutes and 13 seconds. It has been covered by many artists including Bob Dylan, Grover Washington Jr, and Grover Washington Jr named his 1994 album after the song All My Tomorrows.