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Ray Charles
Born Ray Charles Robinson on 23 September 1930 in Albany, Georgia, he was raised in Greenville,
Florida, and started playing the piano before he was five. At age six, he contracted glaucoma
that eventually left him blind. He studied composition (writing music in Braille) and learned
to play the alto saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, and organ while attending the St. Augustine School
for the deaf and the blind from 1937 to 1945. His father died when he was 10, his mother five
years later, and he left school to work in dance bands around Florida, dropping his last name
to avoid confusion with boxer Sugar Ray Robinson. In 1947, with $600 he moved to Seattle and
worked as a Nat "King" Cole-style crooner.
In the decades after Seattle, Ray Charles continued his contributions to the many facets of music in which he excelled. His numerous awards include 8 honorary doctoral degrees, 17 GRAMMYs, the GRAMMY Lifetime Achievement Award, Presidents Merit Award, Kennedy Center Honors, National Medal of the Arts and his Playboy Awards. Heads of State, Presidents, Political Dignitaries and members of Royal families have recognized him repeatedly. The King and Queen of Sweden chose him to receive the Polar Music Award, which is that countrys most prestigious award. Rolling Stone Magazine ranked him #10 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time and #2 on their list of the 100 Greatest Singers of All Time. And in 2013 Ray Charles even received a United States Postal Stamp. One his warmest compliments came from the "Chairman of the Board" Frank Sinatra, who gave him the name "Genius", "the only true Genius in show business". In 1986, Ray Charles formed The Robinson Foundation for Hearing Disorders, Inc., with a $1 million personal endowment. The Robinson Foundation for Hearing Disorders, Inc. later changed its name to The Ray Charles Foundation. The Foundation is dedicated to providing support in the area of hearing disorders and the empowerment of young people through education by offering support to educational institutions and non-profit education programs. Ray Charles said: "The inability to hear is a handicap; not the inability to see." The vision of The Ray Charles Foundation is to instill in the youth of America that "there is no challenge too great one cannot overcome." Ray Charles recorded the song America the Beautiful in 1972. In live performances he followed a consistent pattern of improvisations we associate with gospel and soul music. He added, "Im talkin about America" and "I love America, and you should too", and "Sweet America", all passionate accents that indelibly marked the song as a personal tribute to the country he loved so much. Ray Charles performed America the Beautiful on national and international world stages, all by popular demand. It remains one of Ray Charles most requested songs, first introduced at his stage show at Carnegie Hall with the unfurling of a giant American flag. Ray passed away in June 2004. from raycharles.com |
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homepage: | www.raycharles.com |
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Genius + Soul = Jazz.Live! JZCD 310 recorded October 1961 in Paris/France |
Ray Charles, organ, vocals and his orchestra |
Genius + Soul = Jazz Impulse A2S released 1961 recorded January 1961 |
Ray Charles, organ, vocals Quincy Jones Big Band |
Quincy's Got A Brand New Bag? Mercury SR-61063 released 1965 recorded November 1965 in Los Angeles, CA/USA |
Quincy Jones, conductor Jackie Kelso, alto sax Jerome Richardson, tenor sax Jewel Grant, baritone sax Erbie Green, trombone Kenny Schroyer, bass trombone Bobby Bryant, trumpet Joe Newman, trumpet Jerome Richardson, flute Arthur Knight, guitar Bobby Scott, piano Michel Rubini, piano, organ Ray Charles, piano, organ Rene Hall, guitar Ben Tucker, bass Carol Kay, bass Grady Tate, drums Ray Barretto, bongos, congas Gary Coleman, percussion |
Ray's Moods ABC-Paramount ABC-550 released 1966 |
Ray Charles, piano, organ, vocals The Raelets, vocals Ray Charles and His Orchestra and Chorus |
My Jug And I Tangerine Records TRC-1505 released 1966 recorded in Los Angeles, CA/USA |
Percy Mayfield, vocals Ray Charles, organ, piano no further details known |
Porgy & Bess RCA Victor CPL2-1831 released 1976 |
Ray Charles, vocals, piano, organ, celesta Cleo Laine, vocals Frank deVol, conductor Ray Parker, guitar Scotty Edwards, bass Jimmie Smith, drums Reverend James Cleveland Singers |
Forever Concord CRE-34585-02 compilation |
Ray Charles, piano, organ, vocals Jeff Driskill, sax Juliane Gralle, trombone Chris Walden, trombone, trumpet Daniel Fornero, trumpet Timothy May, guitar Kevin Axt, bass Gregg Field, drums, percussion no more details known |
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