Genius Loves Company

Concord Records - Concord Records
Ray Charles
Release date: 2004-08-31
Audio CD
Blues, Jazz Blues, Piano Blues, Pop, Pop-Soul, R&B, Soul, Soul/R&B, United States of America, Urban Blues

1. Here We Go Again - Features Norah Jones
2. Sweet Potato Pie - Features James Taylor
3. You Don't Know Me - Features Diana Krall
4. Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word - Features Elton John
5. Fever - Features Natalie Cole
6. Do I Ever Cross Your Mind - Features Bonnie Raitt
7. It Was A Very Good Year - Features Willie Nelson
8. Hey Girl - Features Michael McDonald
9. Sinner's Prayer - Features B.B. King
10. Heaven Help Us All - Features Gladys Knight
11. Somewhere Over The Rainbow - Features Johnny Mathis
12. Crazy Love - Features Van Morrison

Genius Loves Company
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Genius Loves Company

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This album has a collection of the blues' genius with other great talents; and lovely performances with Norah Jones, James Taylor, Willie Nelson, B.B. King, Van Morrison. My favorites are: "sorry seems to be the hardest word" with Elton John, and" Do I ever cross your mind" with Bonnie Raitt.

A great album that can only be enhanced by listening to another wonderful collection: Ray Charles & friends

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Genius Loves Company

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Here written are many magnificent Kudos for this CD and I would just like to add a few comments from the casual listener who has always enjoyed Ray Charles from the living room armchair with much awe and many goose-bumps. As the final work of this great artist whose name is synonymous with greatness, I am hard pressed to find a single flaw in this collection. On many occasions I have popped this CD into the home or car player and just let it run its course as many as two or three times without changing it out. The recordings have a dynamic sound that fills your body and soul with music of the spheres, whether it's orchestra, choir, or bald-faced blues guitars and jazzed up Pie-Anna's. Every supple nuance and phrase of every note is captured rich and pure by the producers and engineers, and Ray's voice and those of his guests have never sounded more real, more up close and personal and standing in your living room. Some folks say digital doesn't sound "real". Well the staff at HEAR Music and Phil Ramone and John Burk in particular have made sure this experience is as real as it gets. I give Production on this CD album a whopping "10" for perfection!

And now to the music:

Of particular note I'd like to call out Here We Go Again with Norah Jones, Sinner's Prayer with BB King and Heaven Help Us All with Gladys Knight. On all three tracks, Billy Preston fills in every gap and wash with that glorious Hammond B3, most especially Here We Go Again where Ray calls on him for a standout solo piece. The holy keyboard trinity of Ray, Norah, and Billy, interchanging their delights on this track is well worth the price of CD alone. It welcomes you into the program, slaps you in the face with loving licks, and sets you down for an evening of joyful entertainment. On Sinner's Prayer, Ray reminds us once again that he could blues- and jazz-jam on the piano like no one else. To the very end, Ray never lost his touch and his piano answers every blues-guitar lick that BB can dish out, and answers it with the polish and splayed-finger amazement that only Ray was capable of. Lastly, if it isn't enough having the TRUE pop diva herself, Gladys Knight, exchanging prayers with Ray Charles, on a disc; if that isn't enough for you, glory and bask in the glow of Gladys' tremendous gospel choir, accented at every step with the Reverend Billy Preston giving us what God Gave him! Ray and Billy are together right now tickling the keys in eternity and awaiting the Glory Band of this generation.

Those three were my "Holy" tracks but someone else might revel in the delight of James Taylor and Ray delivering up JT's Sweet Potato Pie with funked up brass and lead guitar jabs back and forth by Ray's amazing band. Or you might just want to bathe in Diana Krall's sultry You Don't Know Me, I wonder if Ray got the miracle of sight on that one! Ray and Elton John exchange piano leads and stanzas on Elton's immortal Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word, but when Ray and Natalie Cole get the Fever, it's blistering!

My favorite track after the three I mentioned above initially is Do I Ever Cross Your Mind with Bonnie Raitt. Bonnie's slide and Ray's piano work together to form a pure piece of art that captures the heart and soul of both artists. While Ray and Diana found vocal compatibility and sensuality on You Don't Know Me, Ray and Bonnie get down and dirty instrumentally on this track, and Bonnie gets downright "wicked" (read the liner notes folks) sliding through Ray's accompaniment.

If you are hard core Ray Charles fan you won't be reading this, but if you are a casual fan, or even a sometimes fan, take note: as a whole product, this is one of the best "albums" Ray ever made and he has made tons.

This is not your usual run of the mill obligatory get some stars together with a big name and slop the hogs for some cash "duets" album (like quite a few I can name). This album was made with loving care, at the invitation of Ray himself with the artists he cared about and deeply wanted to collaborate with. This project was close to his heart and was not a slick-product for the marketing monkeys. So if you are holding off because you have had enough of those "Duets" titled CD's and are sick of picking out two or three winners from the dozen or more songs proffered, then hold off no more. Just look at the artists listed, if they are to your liking, you will get nothing but their best performances here. If you love Ray, but are iffy on the partners involved, let me tell you, they were great with Mr. Charles, each and every one of them. The CD runs the gamut from soft and sentimental orchestral Ray (Johnny Mathis and Willie Nelson) to finger-snapping pop-jazz Ray (JT and Natalie Cole) to Motown Ray (Michael McDonald) to Smooth Ray (Norah, Diana, Van Morrison) to signature blues Ray (BB King, Bonnie) and gospel Ray (Gladys) and tearful Ray (Elton). If variety is the spice of your life and you like excellently produced and recorded music, Genius Loves Company will be your cup of tea. It is pure Genius!

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Genius Loves Company

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I used to own this CD even before it won 8 awards including the Album of the Year in 2005 Grammys. Unfortunately lost it in a rental car from a trip, which is not uncommon I guess. Now I am thrilled to have it back again in my car.

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