The Genius of Ray Charles

The Genius of Ray Charles

The Genius of Ray Charles

more information about The Genius of Ray Charles

Editorial Reviews
<"b000002i4u7580"> Amazon.com essential recording
Why you'd want to limit yourself to owning just one Ray Charles album is a question only you can answer, but if that's the case, The Genius is a strong contender for the slot. Half big-band settings of tunes as diverse as "Let the Good Times Roll," "When Your Lover Has Gone," and "Alexander's Ragtime Band" and half string-drenched ballads like "Just for a Thrill" and "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Cryin'," this 1959 disc lives up to its title in more ways than there's room here to count. Suffice it to say that the album finds Charles at a peak of musical and emotional energy, working in thoroughly sympathetic settings with perfectly matched soloists like tenor men Paul Gonsalves and David "Fathead" Newman and arrangers on the order of Quincy Jones and Ralph Burns. And the closing cut, "Come Rain or Come Shine," may be Charles's single greatest performance. --Rickey Wright

The Genius of Ray Charles, Music, Ray Charles, Blues, Pop, R&B, Soul/Reggae/Rhythm & Blues

The Genius of Ray Charles

google.com

Music:

  1. The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions [Original recording remastered]
  2. The Very Best of Albert King
  3. The Very Best of Big Joe Turner
  4. Think of Me
  5. Timeless
  6. Train Home
  7. True to Yourself
  8. Voodoo Jive: The Best of Screamin' Jay Hawkins
  9. Whiskey Store Live [Live]
  10. Wicked Grin

Music

music

Recommended Music:

Quo/Blue for You [Import]

Xavier Benguerel: Libre Vermell

Without a Song

Music: Perfect Peace

You've Lost That Loving Feeling

Yiddishe Renaissance

Wild And Woolly Wiggle Songs

Wagner: Overture and Orchestral Music

Without Walls

Unplugged [Live]

Zig Zag

Travel By Stars

X-Tremely Fun Latino [Import]

Gospel Gold

Mystere