Ray Charles, Count Basie – Ray Sings, Basie Swings (2006/2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 48:28 minutes | 947 MB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © Concord Records
Ray Sings, Basie Swings combines archival, never-before-heard Ray Charles vocal recordings with brand-new performances by the Count Basie Orchestra. This ground breaking album gives listeners the unprecedented experience of hearing Ray Charles at the dazzling peak of his vocal prowess. Ray Sings, Basie Swings was created with the most up-to-date recording and mixing technology, offering sound quality that is state-of-the art.
The producers discovered archival reels of Ray Charles and the Count Basie Orchestra performing live together in 1973. Although the vocals were superior, the remaining elements were of extremely poor quality. They decided to bring the current Basie Orchestra into the studio and, using the latest technology, they carefully and painstakingly laid down a new instrumental backdrop for Charles’ towering vocals.
Ray Sings, Basie Swings, huh? Hmm, well, yes and no. You see, the story goes something like this. In 2005, Concord Records exec John Burk, who produced Ray Charles’ superb late-career, Grammy-winning Genius Loves Company, found a reel of tape simply labeled “Ray/Basie.” Upon further analysis, it was determined that the 1973 recording featured Ray Charles backed by his own band — Count Basie and his band had actually recorded earlier that day. Charles’ vocal was exceptionally prominent in the mix and at first it was thought that this potentially momentous discovery would prove unable to bear fruit. But then Burk brainstormed and decided to bring the current Count Basie Orchestra — whose leader died in 1984 — into the studio to lay tracks behind Charles’ vocals. So there’s no Basie on Ray Sings, Basie Swings, but that’s merely a technicality, because there is some great music. Charles was in fine form vocally on this mix of remakes of his early ABC-Paramount-era hits and then-recent material. The consecutive reworkings of “Busted,” “Cryin’ Time,” and “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” three of his defining Top Ten hits of the early ’60s, are given brassy, bluesy treatments here, and standards ranging from Oscar Hammerstein II’s “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning” to the Beatles’ “The Long and Winding Road” are transformed in Charles’ hands. The set-closing “Georgia on My Mind,” as close to a signature song as Charles had, is given a tender, minimalist reading, but the track preceding it, “Look What They’ve Done to My Song, Ma,” picked up from the folk-pop singer Melanie, is quite possibly the album’s highlight. It’s appeared on other Ray Charles compilations before, but the gospelized, testifyin’ version featured here has got to be the liveliest take on that song anyone’s ever devised. So, yeah, there’s no Count Basie to be found here, but his namesake orchestra does him proud. For one of those postmortem studio patch jobs that owes as much to technology as talent, it’s a fine addition to the Ray Charles oeuvre, as long as one can get past the semi-false advertising of its title.
Tracklist:
1. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Oh, What A Beautiful Morning (04:36)
2. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Let the Good Times Roll (02:57)
3. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – How Long Has This Been Going On? (06:19)
4. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Every Saturday Night (04:05)
5. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Busted (02:35)
6. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Crying Time (03:53)
7. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – I Can’t Stop Loving You (04:02)
8. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Come Live with Me (04:10)
9. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Feel So Bad (04:11)
10. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – The Long and Winding Road (04:03)
11. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Look What They’ve Done To My Song (02:50)
12. Ray Charles, The Count Basie Orchestra – Georgia On My Mind (04:44)