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Ray Charles - Genius Loves Company (SACD)

Album Details: Genius Loves Company

Release Date:08/31/2004
Label:Concord Records
UPC:013431103363

Other Available Formats: Genius Loves Company

User Reviews: Genius Loves Company

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Ray = Genius; Company = mixed reviews

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 6, 2004 | 11 out of 11 found this Genius Loves Company review helpful

    Pros: BB, Natalie, Bonnie, Van, Gladys, Billy Preston

    Cons: Diana Krall (sorry!), producer and orchestral arranger

    I can understand why Ray picked some of these people - I'd want to sing with them or their songs myself. But some of them are a very bad match. I didn't even recognize Diana Krall, who I like very much. She sounded terrible. But when he&#...39;s wailing with B.B King, Natalie Cole or Gladys Knight, he's in fine form. "Crazy Love" with Van Morrison is almost better than the original, which is saying a lot!I have to fault the orchestral arranger of this album with his over-the-top backup which would serve better in a movie. The songs that just have a rhythm section (featuring the fabulous Billy Preston on Hammond organ) are far superior.Worth a buy, but if you aren't already into Ray Charles yet, go get one of his real albums, like "Late in the Evening." Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Excellent CD.

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 3, 2004 | 6 out of 7 found this Genius Loves Company review helpful

    Pros: Truly The Best Collection of Duets.

    Cons: Nothing Negative.

    I just brought Ray Charles' final recordings and his collaboration with artists from Norah Jones to B.B. King are very good. I even let my brother listen to it and he enjoyed it as much as I did. This cd is a tribute to a man whose career spans 6... decades and broken musical bondaries and influenced countless artists.I definitely recommend this cd to anyone who loves real music and prefers quality to quantity. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Genius Loves Company

  • All Music Guide

    Genius Loves Company is the last studio album Ray Charles completed before his death in June 2004. Prior to this, the last studio album he released was Strong Love Affair in 1996, which was a stab at modern pop, filled with new songs and given an adult contemporary sheen. It was not one of his most distinctive efforts, even when judged against his latterday albums, and it disappeared not long after its release. Charles left Warner and, years later, signed with Concord, who released Genius Loves Company, which had a decidedly different approach than the allmodern Strong Love Affair. As the title acknowledges with a wink, this is a duets album, which may be a little commonplace as far as latterday superstar albums go but is still a step up from his previous studio album since it puts Ray Charles in a comfortable, relaxed situation that plays to his strengths. Instead of trying to put Charles in a modern setting, producers John Burk and Phil Ramone (Burk helmed seven of the album's tracks..., Ramone is responsible for the other five, and their work fits together seamlessly) go for a clean retro setting with a few guitars, synths, and a rhythm section, occasionally dressing it with an orchestra or some strings. In other words, apart from the glistening production, it's not far removed from any of Charles' crossover records from the '60s, and he's also given a strong set of songs, largely familiar pop classics, from "Fever" and "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" to "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word" and "Crazy Love." His duet partners are fairly predictable classy newcomers like Norah Jones and Diana Krall, but also old stalwarts like Elton John, B.B. King, Johnny Mathis, James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt, and the ubiquitous Willie Nelson (who has never sounded older than he does here on "It Was a Very Good Year") but they're also reliable, never overshadowing Ray yet never shrinking in his shadow either; in short, it sounds more like a real duets album than most superstar duet records. The end result is modest, friendly, laidback, and pleasing, one that remains faithful to Charles' music while sounding relatively fresh. It may not be weighty enough to be a careercapping masterpiece, but it's sweet enough to be an appropriate final album which is far more than can be said of Strong Love Affair, or any of the other albums he cut in the '80s or '90s for that matter. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Ray Charles

Ray Charles was the musician most responsible for developing soul music. Singers like Sam Cooke and Jackie Wilson also did a great deal to pioneer the form, but Charles did even more to devise a new form of black pop by merging '50s RB with gospelpowered vocals, adding plenty of flavor from contemporary jazz, blues, and (in the '60s) country. Then there was his singing;... Read more