I've Got You Under My Skin is a Cole Porter song from 1936, introduced in the musical Born to Dance by Virginia Bruce. It blends vocal jazz and traditional pop and has become a standard recorded by hundreds of artists; it was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song that year. The tune is closely associated with Frank Sinatra, whose 1956 recording on the album Songs for Swingin' Lovers! arranged by Nelson Riddle helped cement it as a signature song. The Four Seasons took it to the US and UK Top 10 in 1966 from the album 2nd Vault of Golden Hits. In 1990 Neneh Cherry offered a radical reinterpretation for Red Hot + Blue, adding rap and AIDS-themed commentary and scoring chart success in Europe. The track has continued to surface in popular culture, including a version used to open the 2015 video game Batman: Arkham Knight.