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Ray Charles
1930 - 2004 |

A Pillar of Soul: Ray Charles
By Mark Anthony Neal
SeeingBlack.com Music Critic
Talk
about the Ray Charles and Black music here!
From the vantage point of 50 years into the future, it is perhaps
incomprehensible for folk to truly understand the revolution that
was Ray Charles Robinson. In a Black world defined by talented-tenths
and Black-belt denizens, Ray Charles cut through the divide—his
third eye intact—intuitively understanding that the Saturday
night sinner was all too often the Sunday morning saved. Indeed
the very foundations of Soul—and every form of American
music that has sprung from it—were laid the moment Charles opened
his
mouth to sing the first note of "I Got a Woman" (1954).
What Charles did was not unprecedented—a fellow named Georgia
Tom worked the reverse route, bringing those melodies that he so
lovingly played behind Ma Rainey to church with him, in the process
becoming, Thomas A. Dorsey, the father of Gospel music. And the
cats who were up in the juke-joint the night before would coyly
smile, all the while praising the "lawd." But when Uncle
Ray flowed the opposite way, using those same melodies and rhythms
to "church" the secular world, no doubt more than a few
upstanding Negroes
thought it was blasphemy.
That first breakthrough, "I Got a Woman," was in fact
based on "Let's Talk About Jesus," a 1951 hit for the
Bells of Joy, so imagine the surprise when folks turned on their
radio to find out their "Sweet Jesus" was now sweet Sally.
A year later Charles took it a step further with "Hallelujah,
I Love Her So" (1955). Both recordings were major hits among
Black audiences and very quickly made Charles the best known Rhythm
and Blues artists of his era (there really wasn't even the language
to call this Soul music yet).
For Charles the idea of "church" had nothing to do with
organized religion, per se, but everything to do with tapping into
the well of Black spirituality. Charles understood that Black spirituality
had real-worldly connotations, even as it was being informed by
other-worldly desires. When Charles finally broke through to White
audiences in 1959 with "What I'd Say" he had proved that
mainstream America was ready to be "churched" and folk
like Aretha Franklin, Sam Cooke, Johnnie Taylor, Lou Rawls and
so many others who came up Church took notice. American music has
not been the same since—a fact that was acknowledged when
Charles was included among the inaugural inductees of the Rock
and Roll
Hall of Fame.
And just as so many others would come to benefit from the foundation
he laid—most notably Ms. Aretha—Charles switched up
mid-stride, changing record labels (from Atlantic to ABC-Paramount)
and venturing
into undiscovered Country (literally) and ultimately conquering
the terrain, then known as C&W (Country and Western music).
And of course some would say that
Brother Ray had sold out, but you have to sit down and hear those
songs. First it was Hoagy Carmichael's "Georgia on My Mind" (1960)—a
song that sentimentally aches for the "Old South" just
as Civil Rights marchers were trying to rip the South a new one,
and damn if it's not like listening to the Soul of Black folk.
Twenty years later, the state of Georgia named Charles' version
the official state song.
Two years later Charles is singing songs like "I Can't Stop
Loving You," (his first song to top the pop and R&B charts)
and "You Don't Know Me" (both from an album called Modern
Sounds in Country and Western Music), making it apparent that Brother
Ray wasn't selling out, but selling Soul—humanizing a nation
that had for so long dehumanized Black folk. By the time Charles
records his version of the Southern favorite "You Are My Sunshine" (for
volume two of Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music) it is
clear that this is a Black musical artist who had crossed-over
in a way that was unprecedented.
But Charles remained rooted to the music that birthed him throughout
his career. It's a sound heard clearly on tracks like "Let's
Go Get Stoned" (one of the first writing credits for Ashford
and Simpson), "In the Heat of the Night" (from the movie
soundtrack produced by his old running partner Quincy Jones) or
the funky "Booty Butt" (1970). A perfect example is his
surprise appearance on stage with Aretha Franklin during her career-defining
recording Live at the Filmore West. Midway through their rendition
of "Spirit in the Dark" Franklin turns to Charles and
offers her seat at the piano—"Why don't you sit right here
and take this from me"—and as Charles does his thing
on the electric piano, Ms. Aretha chimes "It's funky up in
here" as the crowd pushes towards frenzy. It is one of those
singular moments in the history of Black music - like when Coltrane
and Duke went to the studio to record "In a Sentimental Mood" (1963)
or when Marley and Stevie stood on stage together at Madison Square
Garden in 1979 or when James Brown and Fela Kuti broke down Diasporic
Funk when JB was in Nigeria in 1973 or every-time Albertina Walker,
Inez Andrews and Shirley Caesar walked on-stage as the Caravans.
When you realize that Franklin and Charles had a bunch of Haight-Ashbury
hippies doing the soul clap, indeed it was a metaphor for the Soul
that saved a nation.
And it was in singing about this nation—"America the
Beautiful"—that
Charles perhaps made his most important artistic and political
statement. Charles version of "America the Beautiful," like
Marvin's "Star Spangled Banner," was never about simply
celebrating the opportunities afforded to the progeny of the formerly
enslaved, but about taking ownership of the ideals of American
Democracy —"Heroes proved in liberating strife" as
Charles sings in that first verse— and consistently striving
to be the moral conscious of this nation (please take a bow, Rep.
Barbara
Lee). Ray Charles' "America the Beautiful" represents
a symbolic moment for African
Americans—a moment when African Americans took control
of this nation's spirit, much the same way Charles himself took
ownership
of Francis Scott Key's song.
— October 8, 2004

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