Ray's confidence is
understandable.
Genius Loves Company
stands as a remarkable hallmark in a remarkable career .In this
his final album, Ray sings a dozen duets with a dazzling array of
guest artists from virtually every genre, who have won a combined
79 GRAMMY¨ Awards. “We cover it all,” Ray adds,
“from country to R&B, pop, rock and blues. I've never
let them put me in a little box, and this CD expresses that open
feeling. A beautiful song is a beautiful song-and to sing with so
many beautiful singers is a blessing from God.”
Ray is enraptured
by the concept of contrasts, a musical theme that resonates throughout
Genius Loves Company. “I love the unexpected,” he says.
“I love how we take that old country tune ‘You Don't
Know Me'-a hit for Eddy Arnold way before I recorded it in the early
sixties-and re-do it with Diana Krall We make it new all over again.
Same goes with Norah Jones. She's singing country with me on ‘Here
We Go Again'-and singing the hell out of it. And of course having
Billy Preston on the Hammond B3-the same Billy who we discovered
in the ‘60s when he was a kid-makes it even more of a family.”
Rays continues, “I recorded ‘Do I Ever Cross You Mind'
in the ‘80s when I was dipping back into country music. Now
here comes Bonnie Raitt proving something I've always said-country
and blues ain't just first cousins, they're blood brothers.”
On song selection,
Ray's approach was relatively easy; “Some of the songs I have
been playing for years, some were all time favorites of mine that
I'd never recorded, others were songs by the artists that I just
really liked, but all were great, with real emotion.” Every
track on Genius Loves Company has a special, even spiritual meaning
for Ray. “B.B. King is my favorite bluesman,” he says.
“One note from Lucille, and you know it's B.B. Well, B.B.
and I did a song from deep in my past-‘Sinner's Prayer'-that
I recorded during my Atlantic days in the ‘50s but learned
from Lowell Fulson when I led his band before I went solo. Brother,
that's ancient history!”
Like “Sinner's
Prayer,” “Fever” reverts back to a seminal period
of American music. “When I decided to sing it,” says
Ray, “I got my friend Raelette Mable John to bring me a copy
of the version done by her brother-Little Willie John. Peggy Lee
made it famous, but Little Willie defined it forever. Now singing
it with Natalie Cole, whose father Nat was the role-model for my
early career, is the icing on the cake. Like her daddy, Natalie's
a singer's singer.”
On the rock side,
Ray's company couldn't be more sterling, beginning with Elton John.
“I was happy to let Elton show me an Elton song,” Ray
explains, “because those songs come from his heart. ‘Sorry
Seems To Be the Hardest Word' is probably his best song. I've heard
Little Jimmy Scott do it, and now I'm honored to sing it with the
cat that wrote it. “Feel the same about James Taylor. His
voice always soothes me. He knows the soft side of the blues. ‘Sweet
Potato Pie' is his unique style of sweet soul.”
Ray's connections
to the songs are, in part, based on his own history as a listener.
“Must have been ten years ago that I heard Michael McDonald's
recording of ‘Hey Girl,' that old hit by Carole King. I liked
how Michael slowed it down and painted it blue. Liked it so much
I started singing it live. So getting to do it with Michael in the
studio was coming full circle.” “Hey Girl” was
one of four tracks on the CD not recorded at Ray's historic studio
in Downtown LA. Instead, Ray and Michael moved to a soundstage on
the Warner Bros. back lot to sing live with a 63-piece orchestra
(“It Was A Very Good Year” and “Over the Rainbow”
are also orchestral recordings).
Genius Loves Company
also touches on the issue of friendship. “Willie Nelson has
been my buddy for decades. We play chess, we swap secrets, we relate
on every level. Now we're singing a song associated with Frank Sinatra-‘It
Was a Very Good Year.' Well, the truth is both Willie and I love
Sinatra and feel like we've paid the dues to tell the news. We're
looking back and loving everything we see.”
“Gladys Knight
is another friend. I first knew her with the Pips. We've sung together
at concerts and recorded other duets. Gladys is my sure-enough sister.
This time I went back to an album I did with Quincy Jones in the
early ‘70s called Message to the People. ‘Heaven Help
Us' is my favorite thing from that album, and to revisit it with
Gladys takes me all the way back to church, my original home and
inspiration.”
Ray continues to celebrate
the concept of contrast. “You might not think of me and Johnny
Mathis as the same kind of singers, and we're not. But, man, when
it comes to ballads we have a common love. Ballads move me. Always
have. Always will. I first recorded ‘Over the Rainbow' forty
years ago on my Ingredients In a Recipe for Soul album. Singing
it with Johnny is a special thrill because he has the ability to
drain a ballad dry.”
“Crazy Love,”
with Van Morrison, is the only non-studio production on Genius Loves
Company. Ray explains: “They asked me to come to New York
to help celebrate Van's induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
I went because I see Van as one of the cats that has kept the faith.
Like me, he's always himself-he stays true to the music that means
the most to him. It meant a lot to sing ‘Crazy Love' on stage
with Van that evening. That's what you hear at the end of Genius
Loves Company, me and Van live.”
Ray finishes, “You
also hear that the title is true-I do love company, especially when
the company is comprised of the beautiful singers who were good
enough to lend me a hand. I have to tell them thank you. Thank you
for making the music sound so good.” And when asked what he
finally took away with him from Genius Loves Company, he'll gladly
tell you, “I relearned the valuable lesson that good friends
are irreplaceable. And when you are with great artists and good
friends, having fun making music, the end result is genius in my
book.”
During a career that
spans nearly six decades, Ray Charles, a 12-time GRAMMY® Award-winner
and an original inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, has
appeared on more than 250 recordings. While he has performed with
various artists in the past, Genius Loves Company will be his first
full album of duets. At the helm of the recording is producer John
Burk. GRAMMY winning producer Phil Ramone also lends his expertise
for five of the tracks (“You Don't Know Me,” “Sorry
Seems to Be the Hardest Word,” “Do I Ever Cross Your
Mind?” “Fever,” and “Crazy Love”).
Ray
Charles recently received the NAACP Image Awards “Hall of
Fame” honor and was named a “Cultural Treasure”
by the City of Los Angeles. The area outside his central Los Angeles
studios, which was declared an historic landmark, has also been
renamed “Ray Charles Square.”