Ray Charles Has Died

Written by Craig Lyndall
Published June 10, 2004

Unfortunately Ray Charles has died at the age of 73. I saw him play live once and it was amazing. The one memory of him that will always stick around will be of the scene from The Blues Brothers when he plays the music store owner. He pretends that he isn't blind and when he waves the gun around, I just lose it. Classic musician, with a sense of humor about his misfortune. He will be missed.

From Newsday.com

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Ray Charles, the Grammy-winning crooner who blended gospel and blues in such crowd-pleasers as "What'd I Say" and heartfelt ballads like "Georgia on My Mind," died Thursday, a spokesman said. He was 73.

    Charles died at his Beverly Hills home surrounded by family and friends, said spokesman Jerry Digney.

    Charles last public appearance was alongside Clint Eastwood on April 30, when the city of Los Angeles designated the singer's studios, built 40 years ago in central Los Angeles, as a historic landmark.

    Blind by age 7 and an orphan at 15, Charles spent his life shattering any notion of musical boundaries and defying easy definition. A gifted pianist and saxophonist, he dabbled in country, jazz, big band and blues, and put his stamp on it all with a deep, warm voice roughened by heartbreak from a hardscrabble childhood in the segregated South.

    "His sound was stunning — it was the blues, it was R&B, it was gospel, it was swing — it was all the stuff I was listening to before that but rolled into one amazing, soulful thing," singer Van Morrison told Rolling Stone magazine in April.

    Charles won nine of his 12 Grammy Awards between 1960 and 1966, including the best R&B recording three consecutive years ("Hit the Road Jack," "I Can't Stop Loving You" and "Busted").

    His versions of other songs are also well known, including "Makin' Whoopee" and a stirring "America the Beautiful." Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell wrote "Georgia on My Mind" in 1931 but it didn't become Georgia's official state song until 1979, long after Charles turned it into an American standard.

Craig Lyndall rants, raves and writes other stuff at FilteringCraig.com and at The Cleveland Sports Curse
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Ray Charles Has Died
Published: June 10, 2004
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: News
Writer: Craig Lyndall
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Comments

#1 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:03PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

aww...crap!

#2 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:04PM — Craig Lyndall [URL]

That kind of sums it up...

#3 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:13PM — ClubhouseCancer

This man's acheivement from 1956-1962 or so was monumental. Some of the greatest American music, period.

This is very sad.

#4 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:25PM — The Dude

Ever wake up in the morning
About the break of day
Feel over to the pillow
Where your baby used to lay
Then you go on crying
Like you never cried before
You even cry so loud
You give the blues to your neighbor next door

-- Ray Charles

#5 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:49PM — Mac Diva [URL]

Yes! A dead man who deserves our respect. I have a wall of framed candid photos of musicians in my little home office. Some of them set me back more than I could afford when I bought them. A picture of Ray Charles composing at the piano is central to the display. Rest in peace, R.C.

#6 — June 10, 2004 @ 16:59PM — Nyx [URL]

Now there's someone who should be on the ten dollar bill or Mt. Rushmore.

Think Fox News will have live coverage of his funeral? Hell no! Just more opression of the black man!

Let's paint the whitehouse black!

#7 — June 10, 2004 @ 17:07PM — TDavid [URL]

Ray had a smooth voice. He'll be sorely missed :(

#8 — June 10, 2004 @ 17:17PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

This is a bad week for musicians who wear sunglasses, first we have Robert Quine, now Ray Charles.

#9 — June 10, 2004 @ 18:03PM — BJ [URL]

This is really a drag. Ray was a true original.

I saw him in Vegas in about '92 or so when I was there for a conference. It was a rundown casino (the Desert Inn, I think) and a small, crowded room, the sort where you pay your money and order your two drink minimum at the door. A pair of watered down vodka tonics, my main warm weather drink back then. They have to bring the drinks before the show starts, because there isn't room on the floor for waiters to move among the customers. I was alone; none of the people I knew at the conference cared to go. I was leaning my left arm on the stage, for both shows, maybe 8 feet from the man himself. The performance was uneven by Ray Charles standards, yet powerful and exhilerating. One of the best nights ever.

It was a classic American experience, like visiting Rushmore as a kid in the back of a station wagon.

#10 — June 10, 2004 @ 18:07PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

After hearing Ray Charles died, I listened to what is probably his greatest album (and he was a performer who flourished in singles) "Modern Sounds In Country and Western Music".

He has passed on, but leaves a legacy which lives every day, which is more than most of us can claim.

#11 — June 10, 2004 @ 18:29PM — TDavid [URL]

Anybody know where or how to get ahold of that song, "You Don't Know Me" Ray sung on Groundhog's Day starring Bill Murray? It's not on the soundtrack.

We already own the DVD, and I suppose I could just copy it from there. Been looking to buy that song if I can find it and haven't seen it ...

#12 — June 10, 2004 @ 19:15PM — CW [URL]

Now he sees.

#13 — June 10, 2004 @ 22:19PM — TDavid [URL]

I found the song I was talking about here at Amazon. Maybe that can be added to the ASIN numbers above.

#14 — June 11, 2004 @ 01:03AM — Dirtgrain [URL]

"Blues and misery all around."

#15 — June 11, 2004 @ 01:18AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

"Yes! A dead man who deserves our respect."

Yeah, instead of all those undeserving white guys...

#16 — June 11, 2004 @ 01:25AM — Dirtgrain [URL]

RJ, are you seeing this as a case of affirmative action gone bad? Explain yourself. Not that I can complain, but your comment sounds a little kooky. Why bring up race?

#17 — June 11, 2004 @ 02:26AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

Dirt:

I wasn't bringing up race. MD did, though tacitly.

Ray Charles was a great performer. We will all miss him.

But MD's comment was anti-Reagan and anti-Tillman (two white guys).

You'd have to know the context to follow my argument...

#18 — June 11, 2004 @ 02:56AM — SFC SKI

A great singer and entertainer, I am glad I saw him perform at least once.

#19 — June 11, 2004 @ 13:09PM — HW Saxton Jr.

Ray was the greatest! He'll be missed.
His LP "The Genius Sings The Blues" is
a must have. Every song is better than
the next,leaving you wanting more when
it is over.The cat was fucking brilliant
what else can you say? Rest In Peace RC.


#20 — June 11, 2004 @ 15:01PM — The Dude

To TDavid
I believe that's from "Modern Sounds In Country and Western Music".
I was just thinking about that song. It's a classic lost-love song, but the way Brother Ray sings it, it sounds like he's telling the whole world, "you don't know me."
Heartbreaking.

#21 — June 11, 2004 @ 17:18PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

"You Don't Know Me" is track #2 on "Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music", probably one of the best genre defying albums ever.

Rhino has a CD reissue of the original double LP set with bonus tracks.

#22 — June 11, 2004 @ 19:22PM — Mac Diva [URL]

(Whispering.) Jim, where can I download that song peer-to-peer?

Scanned the thread. Don't see anywhere I mentioned race. However, a Right Wing associate of RJ Elliiott's did in Comment 6.

#23 — June 11, 2004 @ 19:36PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

Well, you could just go to Amazon via the link which credits Blogcritics.org with the sale and buy the Rhino CD Modern Sounds In Country And Western Music.

Not that I'm saying you, McD, advocate stealing from blind, black people with many children. You'd never do anything like that, would you?

#24 — June 12, 2004 @ 02:07AM — RJ Elliott [URL]

No, of course not. She'd rather steal from white kids.

#25 — June 12, 2004 @ 04:09AM — Mac Diva [URL]

(Whispering and winking.) Jim, I would if the children are older than I am. I'm not sure there are all that many Charlesettes. You may be confusing him with B.B. King, who got up off that thang without protection an awful lot. If I remember correctly, his offspring are in the high double digits.

#26 — June 14, 2004 @ 17:52PM — chairmankc [URL]

The coincidental timing of Charles' death with Reagan's will probably mean that fewer people will really reflect on what Ray did for American music. It's good to see other folks thinking about him, though. I've long been a fan--even more so lately ("Ray Charles & My Baby at http://chairmankc.tblog.com/). I don't know if Mt. Rushmore or a ten dollar bill is in order for either of the two, but I know thinking about Mr. Charles will always leave me happy.

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