Google
 Home 
 Memorable TV
 Memorable Music

 Reviews Archive 
 Book Reviews
 TV News
 DVD News 
 Movie News 
 Competitions 
 Features
 Search 
 Buy DVD's
MEMORABLE  TV
 TV's Greatest Hits
 TV UK
 TV USA
 TV Australia
 TV Canada
 UK Sitcoms
 UK Comedy
 UK Documentary
 Children's TV
 World TV
 Talk Shows
 Quiz and Game Shows
 Episode Guides
 The Hall of Fame
 Soapworld
 Classic Westerns
 Classic UK Scifi
 MEMORABLE MUSIC
 The Hall of Fame
 The Album Archive 
 Classic Albums
 Lyrics
 Guitar Tabs
 The 1960's
 Australian Rock
 The Birth of Rock N Roll
 Articles

 

 MORE STUFF
 Book Reviews Archive 
 CD Reviews & Archive
 Links
 Contact

                       

Ray Charles
 b. Ray Charles Robinson, 23 September 1930, Albany, Georgia, USA. Few epithets sit less comfortably than that of genius; Ray Charles has borne this title for over 30 years. As a singer, composer, arranger and pianist, his prolific work deserves no 
other praise. Born in extreme poverty, Charles was slowly blinded by glaucoma until, by the age of seven, he had lost his sight completely. Earlier, he had been forced to cope with the tragic death of his brother, whom he had seen drown in a water tub. He learned to read and write music in braille and was proficient on several instruments by the time he left school. His mother Aretha died when Charles was 15, and he continued to have a shared upbringing with Mary Jane (the first wife of Charles's absent father). Charles drifted around the Florida circuit, picking up work where he could, before moving across the country to Seattle. Here he continued his itinerant career, playing piano at several nightclubs in a style reminiscent of Nat "King" Cole and a vocal similar to Charles Brown.
Charles began recording in 1949 and this early, imitative approach was captured on several sessions. Three years later, Atlantic Records acquired his contract, but initially the singer continued his "cool" direction, revealing only an occasional hint of the passions later unleashed. "It Should've Been Me", "Mess Around" and "Losing Hand" best represent this early R&B era, but Charles's individual style emerged as a result of his work with Guitar Slim. This impassioned, almost crude blues performer sang with a gospel-based fervour that greatly influenced Charles's thinking. He arranged Slim's million-selling single, "Things That I Used To Do", on which the riffing horns and unrestrained voice set the tone for Charles's own subsequent direction. This effect was fully realized in "I Got A Woman" (1954), a song soaked in the fervour of the Baptist Church, but rendered salacious by the singer's abandoned, unrefined delivery. Its extraordinary success, commercially and artistically, inspired similarly compulsive recordings, including "This Little Girl Of Mine" (1955), "Talkin' 'Bout You" (1957) and the lush and evocative "Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying" (1959), a style culminating in the thrilling call and response of "What'd I Say" (1959). This acknowledged classic is one of the all-time great encore numbers performed by countless singers and bands in stadiums, clubs and bars all over the world. However, Charles was equally adept at slow ballads, as his heartbreaking interpretations of "Drown In My Own Tears" and "I Believe To My Soul" (both 1959) clearly show. Proficient in numerous styles, Charles's recordings embraced blues, jazz, standards and even country, as his muscular reading of "I'm Movin' On" attested.

In November 1959 Charles left the Atlantic label for ABC Records, where he secured both musical and financial freedom. Commentators often cite this as the point at which the singer lost his fire, but early releases for this new outlet simply continued his groundbreaking style. "Georgia On My Mind" (1960) and "Hit The Road Jack" (1961) were, respectively, poignant and ebullient, and established the artist as an international name. This stature was enhanced further in 1962 with the release of the massive-selling album Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music, a landmark collection that produced the million-selling single "I Can't Stop Loving You". Its success defined the pattern for Charles's later career; the edges were blunted, the vibrancy was stilled as Charles's repertoire grew increasingly inoffensive. There were still moments of inspiration: "Let's Go Get Stoned" and "I Don't Need No Doctor" brought glimpses of a passion now too often muted, while Crying Time, Charles's first album since kicking his heroin habit, compared favourably with any Atlantic release. This respite was, however, temporary and as the 60s progressed so the singer's work became less compulsive and increasingly MOR. Like most artists, he attempted cover versions of Beatles songs and had substantial hits with versions of "Yesterday" and "Eleanor Rigby". Two 70s releases, A Message From The People and Renaissance, did include contemporary material in Stevie Wonder's "Living In The City" and Randy Newman's "Sail Away", but subsequent releases reneged on this promise.

Charles' 80s work included more country-flavoured collections and a cameo appearance in the movie The Blues Brothers, but the period is better marked by the singer's powerful appearance on the USA For Africa release, "We Are The World" (1985). It brought to mind a talent too often dormant, a performer whose marriage of gospel and R&B laid the foundations for soul music. His influence is inestimable, and his talent widely acknowledged and imitated by formidable white artists such as Steve Winwood, Joe Cocker, Van Morrison and Eric Burdon. Charles has been honoured with countless awards during his career including induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 1986, and receiving the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987. It was fitting that, in 1992, an acclaimed documentary, Ray Charles: The Genius Of Soul, was broadcast by PBS television. My World was a return to form, and was particularly noteworthy for his cover versions of Paul Simon's "Still Crazy After All These Years" and Leon Russell's "A Song For You", which Charles made his own through the power of his outstanding voice. Strong Love Affair continued in the same vein with a balance of ballads matching the up-tempo tracks; however, it was clear that low-register, slow songs such as "Say No More", "Angelina" and "Out Of My Life' should be the focus of Charles" concentration. In 2000 Charles returned to jazz with an excellent contribution to Steve Turre's In The Spur Of The Moment.

No record collection should be without at least one recording by this "musical genius". His ability to cross over into other musical territories is enviable. He has performed rock, jazz, blues, and country with spectacular ease, but it is "father of soul music" that remains his greatest title.


                              

Australian Web Hosting

HOME | MEMORABLE TV | MEMORABLE MUSIC | BUY DVD'S | SEARCH | DVD REVIEWS | BOOK REVIEWS | FEATURES | LINKS | FAQ | ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | COPYRIGHT | PRIVACY | CONTACT 

(C) 2002-2007 Memorable TV/Little Acorns Publishing