Ray Charles Genius And Friends

Ray Charles Genius And Friends Rating: 3,8/5 1149 votes

Oct 18, 2005. Genius & Friends is a well-groomed follow up to the Grammy award winning Genius Loves Company. While this album does not carry the weight that his swansong did, it features some of the best of the best recording artists today. Ray recorded most of the tracks bewteen 1997-98. In 1994 he recorded the.

Blind from the age of seven due to glaucoma, Ray Charles threw himself into music to become one of the 20th Century's best-loved and most influential entertainers; highly respected in jazz, blues, gospel and soul circles, while also scoring many pop-soul hits like Hit The Road Jack and I Can't Stop Loving You. Orphaned in his teens, Charles studied classical music but abandoned it to play the blues and jazz he heard on the radio, going on to play piano with various bands in Florida, where he first wore his trademark wraparound sunglasses. In 1947 Charles moved to Seattle, where he released his first record Confession Blues two years later. It went to Number 2 in the R&B charts and, signed by Atlantic, he made his first dent on the mainstream charts in the 1950s with I've Got A Woman, The Night Time (Is The Right Time) and Hallelujah, I Love Her So. The early 1960s saw him move to a soul sound with What'd I Say, Georgia On My Mind and - his biggest of all - I Can't Stop Loving You, which was Number 1 for five weeks. Whilst the hits Busted, Take These Chains From My Heart and Crying Time were covers of country songs. Ray Charles remained hugely popular for the rest of his career, despite a long-term struggle with heroin addiction. Artist biography compiled by BDS/West 10. All rights reserved
Descargar

Ray Charles Genius And Friends Descargar

Ray Charles Genius And FriendsGenius

Atlantic/Rhino's 2005 Genius & Friends is the end result of a project Ray Charles initiated a few months before his death in June 2004. According to James Austin's liner notes, Charles called Austin in December of 2003, asking if he could find the masters to an unreleased duets record Ray recorded in 1997 and 1998. Austin found the tapes, but Charles was too sick to work on them, so after his passing -- and after his final studio album, the duets record Genius Loves Company, became a number one hit in August of 2004 -- Atlantic/Rhino decided to finish off the project, bringing in producer Phil Ramone to oversee the completion of the album. This included bringing in singers to record their parts, since apart from two tracks -- a 1994 duet with Diana Ross on 'Big Bad Love' and a live 1991 version of 'Busted' with Willie Nelson (taken from the television special Ray Charles: 50 Years in Music) -- these are all studio constructions, with vocalists duetting with a previously recorded Ray. While not quite the monstrosity it could have been -- posthumous duets albums like this always bear an unsettling ghoulish undertow -- Genius & Friends is also not a particularly good album either. This isn't because the pairings are ill conceived -- apart from the woefully outmatched American Idol winner Ruben Studdard on 'Imagine' (which boasts perhaps Ray's best vocal performance on this record), there's nobody here who doesn't hold his or her own, and Ramone has skillfully edited the new recordings with the existing tapes so it sounds like they were recorded at the same time, even if it rarely sounds as if the vocalists were in the same room together. Rather, the problem is that the productions are caught halfway between '90s adult contemporary and modern neo-soul, sounding too slick and polished to really be memorable. It's pleasant enough -- and it's top-loaded, too, with the duets with Angie Stone, Chris Isaak, and Mary J. Blige being among the best cuts -- but it's not as relaxed or appealing as Genius Loves Company, which had the feeling of being a real duets album. This feels like what it is -- a professional studio creation. Not a terrible thing per se, but not something that makes for a good album, either.

SampleTitle/ComposerPerformerTimeStream
1 4:00
2 3:48
3 5:07
4 3:41
5 4:28
6 3:42
7 3:45
8 4:43
9 4:46
10 4:40
11 5:10
12 4:13
13 2:32
14 2:58
blue highlight denotes track pick