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File:Ray-charles 2229.jpg

Ray Charles Robinson (September 23, 1930 - June 10, 2004) was a one of first performers to fuse R&B and Gospel music to create Soul back in The Fifties and he exerted a major influence on the development of the Rock and Roll genre.

Losing his sight to an infection at a young age and educated in music at a school for the blind, Ray became a talented musician and multi-instrumentalist who got his start singing and playing piano and organ with Country Music and Blues bands in the 1940s. Although he recorded a few minor hits, his big break came when he was signed to Atlantic Records in the early 1950s and recorded songs such as "Mess Around", "I Got A Woman", "Hallelujah, I Love Her So" and "What'd I Say", which combined raw, passionate gospel energy with boogie-influenced music and secular lyrics. While this music provoked some controversy at the time, these songs are now recognised as some of the first soul songs and established Ray as the inventor of a whole new genre.

Subsequently, he joined a major label (ABC-Paramount) and decided to explore new sounds, including Jazz, Pop and especially Country, which earned him some of his biggest hits, including "Georgia On My Mind", "Hit the Road Jack" and "I Can't Stop Loving You" (a song which is now credited for helping to popularise country outside of its traditional audiences). Although he struggled with drug addiction and sporadic success after the 1960s, interest in his music was renewed thanks to his appearance in The Blues Brothers in 1980 and he remained popular until his death from cancer in 2004.

Ray's influence on other singers and musicians cannot be understated; Frank Sinatra called him "the only true genius" in popular music, Billy Joel was hugely influenced by his piano playing and singing, the members of The Beatles all expressed their admiration for his achievements, with Paul McCartney crediting him as his reason for getting into music, and his song "What'd I Say" was allegedly the first song Mick Jagger performed as a member of The Rolling Stones.

His early life, rise to fame, dalliances with drug addiction and involvement in the civil rights movement are chronicled in the Academy Award-winning Biopic Ray, released only a few months after his death.

Tropes used in Ray Charles include:
  • Blind Black Guy: If a black character is blind, expect them to be a parody of Ray (or possibly Stevie Wonder).
  • Blind Musician
  • The Cover Changes the Meaning: The lyrics to "Georgia on My Mind" were originally written for composer Hoagy Carmichael's sister, despite it being ambiguous enough to refer to the state or a woman. After Ray made it famous as a dedication to Georgia, it became the official state song.
  • Dance Sensation: Everybody's doing the "Mess Around".
  • Erudite Stoner: After kicking his heroin habit, Charles coped by smoking weed every day.
  • Genre Popularizer: Either "I Got a Woman" or "What'd I Say" is considered to be this for Soul, depending on who you ask, but either way, it was Ray.
  • Greatest Hits Album: He has several conventional greatest hits and best of sets, but several of his early albums were effectively hits collections as a result of the record industry practices in the 1950s. For example, his first "studio" album (released in 1957) incorporated hit songs he'd recorded as far back as 1953.
  • Intercourse with You: "What'd I Say".
  • Live Album: 1959's Ray Charles At Newport stands alongside Live At the Apollo as one of the best live recordings of the early R&B/Soul era.
  • One-Scene Wonder: His appearance in The Blues Brothers as the owner of the music shop.
  • Sesame Street Cred
  • Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll
  • Stage Name: He dropped his last name so as not to be confused with the boxer "Sugar" Ray Robinson.
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