Ray Charles

Ray Charles

Age
73 (passed away Jun. 10th, 2004)
Birthday
Sep. 23rd, 1930
Born in
Albany, Georgia, USA
Height
5' 9"

Ray Charles' Main TV Roles

Show Character(s)
The Andy Williams Show TV Show
The Andy Williams Show
Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters TV Show
Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters
CMT Crossroads TV Show
CMT Crossroads
The Name of the Game TV Show
The Name of the Game
Saturday Live (UK) TV Show
Saturday Live (UK)
 

Main Movie Roles

2006 - Before the Music Dies
1996 - Spy Hard
1994 - Love Affair
1980 - The Blues Brothers

Guest TV Roles

Show Name
Characters Played
Ep Count
Sammy
4
Himself - Musician (segment "Ray Charles")
3
Himself - Host
1
Himself
1
Himself
1
Arthur Tibbits
1
Himself
1
Himself
1
[Complete List]



BIOGRAPHY:

A tragic fate may have given this visionary a heightened sensitivity, perception, awareness, even expansion to his obvious musical gifts that he may have never touched upon had he not suffered from his physical affliction. Whatever it was, Ray Charles revolutionized American music and was catapulted to legendary status by the time he died in Beverly Hills at age 73. Born to Aretha and Baily Robinson, an impoverished Albany, Georgia, family that moved to Greenville, Florida while he was still an infant. It was not a cause for joy and celebration. His father soon abandoned the family and his baby brother, George Robinson, drowned in a freak washtub accident. Ray himself developed glaucoma at the age of five and within two years had lost his sight completely. A singer in a Baptist choir, he developed a love and feel for rhythms and studied music at the State School for Deaf and Blind Children, showing which brought out his talent and ear for playing various instruments, including the piano and clarinet. An orphan by his early teens, Ray joined a country band at age 16 called The Florida Playboys. He moved to Seattle in 1948 where he and Southern guitarist Gossady McGee formed the McSon Trio. With an emphasis on easy-styled jazz, Ray also played in bebop sessions on the sly. He departed from the McSon Trio and signed with Los Angeles-based Swing Time Records, becoming the pianist for rhythm and blues great Lowell Fulson and his band. Atlantic Records eventually picked him up. Along the road he would add composer, writer and arranger to his formidable list of talents.

Ray's first R&B hit was "Confession Blues" in Los Angeles in 1949. In 1951 he had his first solo chart buster with "Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand." His amazing versatility and raw, soulful delivery quickly caught on with audiences and helped put Atlantic Records on the map. Hits like "Mess Around," "Things I Used to Do," "A Fool for You," "I've Got a Woman," "Drown in My Own Tears", and especially "What'd I Say" in 1959, pushed gospel and R&B to a wider crossover audience. He made a move into the country music arena--unheard of for a black singer--in the 1960s, doing soulful spins on Hank Williams (I) and Eddy Arnold tunes. In 1960 he left Atlantic and signed with ABC-Paramount. Under ABC-Paramount, hits poured out during this peak time with "I Can't Stop Loving You," "Hit the Road Jack," "Busted" and his beloved signature song "Georgia On My Mind."

His landmark 1962 album "Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music" brought a new swinging style to country music. From there he traveled a mainstream route--from interpreting songs from The Beatles ("Eleanor Rigby") to appearing in "Diet Pepsi" ads ("You Got the Right One, Baby, Uh-huh!"). He also showed up sporadically in films, playing himself in the movie Ballad in Blue (1964) and guest-starring in The Blues Brothers (1980) with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi. A TV musical variety favorite with his trademark dark glasses and dry humor, he worked alongside such musical legends as Ella Fitzgerald and Barbra Streisand on their very special evenings of song.

It is hard to believe that with everything he accomplished, Ray also had to deal with a longstanding heroin problem. In the mid-'60s he was arrested for possession of heroin and marijuana and revealed that he'd been addicted for nearly two decades. By 1965 he had completely recovered. The man who lived life on the edge was divorced twice and had 12 children both in and outside his marriages. At the time of his death from liver disease in 2004, he was working on a recording project of duets with such performers as Willie Nelson, Bonnie Raitt, B.B. King, Elton John and Norah Jones. This collaboration entitled "Genius Loves Company" led to an incisive win at the Grammy awards--eight posthumous trophies including "Album of the Year" and "Record of the Year."


TRIVIA:
  • Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume 7, 2003-2005, pages 78-80. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale, 2007.
  • Blind from glaucoma since age 6.
  • Was the first artist to combine both R&B and Gospel together.
  • One of the first singers to own his own master recordings.
  • He was voted the 10th Greatest Rock 'n' Roll Artist of all time by Rolling Stone.
  • Performed at 'Ronald Reagan (I)' (qv)'s second inauguration in 1985 and also at 'Bill Clinton (I)' (qv)'s first inauguration in 1993.
  • He was awarded the American National Medal of the Arts in 1993 by the National Endowment of the Arts in Washington D.C.
  • Charter member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986.


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