Favorite Ray Charles LPs/45s/Songs...
kitchenknight
4,922 Posts
...I been feeling the man's version of "Drown in My Own Tears," a lot lately, and after hearing it on the radio a couple weeks back, "What'd I Say," has been in heavy-ro.What's some of your favorite joints by Mr. Ray Charles?
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J3((, this thread was started in response to your lack of RR post on waxidermy...thanks for coming through with a response. (no ayo.)
Most dollar bins can turn up a slice of his "Every Saturday Night" 45 which is a staple in our household.
"Every Saturday night
I get in my sin
And as long as I'm able
I'mma do the same thing again
My head gets so bad
It's a doggone shame
I be so toe down
I don't even know my name."
Now for my question: Who remembers the other Ray Charles Appreciation thread from some years ago that spawned the TOE UP v. TOE DOWN thread? I recall Soulstrut intelligentsia was unable to determine whether proper ghetto parlance was "toe down" or "tore down."
Can I get a witness,
~B
and an excellent topic 'tis. I have not put a Ray Charles record on the turntable in a good long time. Gonna have to correct that.
I remember hearing "Heartbreaker" in Raging Bull once and being all like "Jesus Christ what is that song?!?!" Sure enough I even had the record. I really gotta listen to music more often that I debate it online...
a good floor filler at just about any club. People hear that
familiar vocal style combined with an uptempo beat and
just dig it.
He total tears me up, and never toes me down.
America The Beautiful
and
Your Love Is So Doggone Good
Plus these ABC singles (most of these never made it to an album):
"I Can Make It Through The Days"
"That's A Lie"/"Go On Home"
"My Baby Don't Dig Me"
"That's All I Am To You"
"Tired Of My Tears"
"Never Had Enough Of Nothing Yet"
"At The Club"/"Hide Nor Hair"
"The Train"
"Somebody Ought To Write A Book About It"
I love that.
I Believe to My Soul is probably my jam of jams, at least these days.
I have a real soft spot though for those early chestnuts Greenbacks
and It Should Have Been Me - I LOVED those songs when I was a young kid,
with their funny plots and punchlines ... and it was probably over 20 years
until I realized that Ray was doing both voices! I would talk about
them as "those songs where he's doing a duet with another guy, who just
kinda reads the verses and then Ray comes in all swingin'!" Ha!
I'll also co-sign for a fourth time on the Living for the City 45 - my man
OT hipped me to that one only a couple years back ... and add that pretty
much anything I have picked up on his TANGERINE label has been excellent.
I own approx 200 copies of Booty Butt - a nice slice of big band funk
credited to the Raelettes.
And yeah, it's kinda crazy how Ray was completely with the HB3 on One Mint Julep, and dudes just spent the next 40 years trying
to match up.
Ray Charles and Jimmy Lewis "If it wasnt for Bad Luck" TRC 45 head noddin' funky soul...great!
Also had a great night being snowed in about 10 years ago with some friends and drinkin' whiskey and listening to the Crying Time LP...
The Impulse! record is hot too. Very easy to find.
The ABC stuff becomes spotty with all the choral ish IMO. I like it raw. But I do love the C&W jawn.
Yes.
re: yes
I Don't Need No Doctor
Hide Nor Hair / At the Club (Same 45)
I Chose To Sing the Blues
The Train
Something Inside Me
I Can't Stop Loving You Baby (not to be confused with the country tune I Can't Stop Loving You)
Tired of My Tears
I'm Satisfied
Sweet Young Thing Like You
That's A Lie / Go On Home (Same 45)
One Mint Julep
Sidewinder / Booty Butt (Same 45)
that made my morning.
My pleasure!
I also dropped 'You Are My Sunshine' at the soul night on saturday & people were dancing. I also like that 'In The Heat Of The Night' 45. I wouldn't go so far as saying 'every note he recorded' but there is a lot of good stuff.
Let me add to my list these Syrup numbers:
I Can't stop Loving You
Porgy And Bess Lp with Cleo Laine
No Letter Today
Funk and fast soul are fine, but sometimes you need the real deep down soul that comes from Genius + Orchestra.
Don't like her voice but Ray is stellar. The instrumental of There's A Boat That's Leaving Soon for NY is a great cut.
So many of those ABC 45's have a strong soul/R&B cut on the A-sides, as well.
Most of the time he was with ABC, the singles and album markets were wildly different. I kinda get the impression he cut hard soul on 45's so he'd still be in rotation at teenage house parties...but the albums were aimed at older jazz/blues fans who bought his Atlantic sides in the fifties. Just a guess.
Even better: check the writer's credits. If you see Jimmy Holiday or Jimmy Lewis's names in parentheses, nine times out of ten it's gonna be hard soul. That album I mentioned up there, Doing His Thing? That was ALL Jimmy Lewis songs...all straight soul. (And Jimmy himself duets with Ray on "If It Wasn't For Bad Luck!")
Look out for "Understanding" (a single that did appear on the Portrait Of Ray album)...it's this hilarious spoken-word thing where Ray talks about the "understanding" that he has with his woman, especially if she cheats on him ("her soul might belong to the Good Lord, but her head is gonna belong to me!").
Yeah, but there's a world of difference between deep-down soul and deep-down schlock! "I Can't Stop Loving You," "No Letter Today," "Tears," and "Crying Time," to name four examples, are real good POP ballads from his ABC years that I listen to a lot. But as far as DEEP DOWN SOUL ballads, where the voices and strings are either minimal or absent, I'd go with:
"Seems Like I Gotta Do Wrong"
"I Can Make It Through The Days"
"Careless Love"
"Here We Go Again"
And from Renaissance, one of the albums he did for his own Crossover label, he did a BADASS "Sail Away" (yeah, the Randy Newman song about Africans being conned into slavery).
Curious about the OG. Is there a 45? What LP is it on? Etc.
One with orchestral backing, which slays the vanilla version. I have the vanilla version and wonder if there's a 45 of the orchestral joint.