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10 June 2014

"So goodbye, old sweethearts and pals"



Untitled, wordless blues, performed at the Olympia Theater in Paris on 18 May 1962.
Ray Charles - p, voc; Sonny Forriest - guitar; Edgar Willis - bass; Bruno Carr - drums.

First released in 2013 by Body & Soul as part of the album Ray Charles - Live In Paris; Volume 2. Cartoon by Mike Peters.

06 June 2014

Rare footage of the Ray Charles Band in 1988

On June 23d, 1988 the Ray Charles Group played a private concert at CNIT La Défense, in Puteaux. To announce another - public - concert (on June 30, at the Palais des Sports in Paris), TF-2 broadcast a small reportage by Yoba Grégoire, on the 24th.

Ray Charles At La Salle Pleyel In Paris (1970)

On 1, 2 and 4 October 1970  Ray Charles gave a total of six concerts at La Salle Pleyel in Paris.* Audio recordings of two shows have survived (see below). A third concert was the subject of a 4m15s news item by Gérard Duclos, broadcast by TF 1 on 3 October, covering Ray's preparations for his walk-on (while the band played Sidewinder), a few interview fragments, plus a (partial, but quite good) performance of I've Got A Woman:


Of the late show on October 1, broadcast by radio station Europe-1, the after-intermission part has survived:
  1. Tears Inside (With Ray Charles Orchestra)
  2. The Bright Lights And You Girl
  3. Yours
  4. Georgia On My Mind
  5. Hallelujah I Love Her So
  6. The Sun Died
  7. I've Got A Woman
  8. Going Down Slow
  9. Introduction Raelettes (with a few notes of Booty Butt)
  10. Finders Keepers, Losers Weepers
  11. Show Me The Sunshine
  12. Eleanor Rigby
  13. Indian Love Call (ft Susaye Greene)
  14. What'd I Say
  15. Finale
It's a bit suspect that I Can't Stop Loving You is not on this list; it may have been edited out by Europe-1. Show Me The Sunshine (#11) got an okay, somewhat de-countryfied, treatment. So far, I only knew the song from the 1970 album Love Country Style.
But the real spice was at the beginning. Ray and the Orchestra performed a splendid, up tempo version of Tears Inside (#1) with an amazing trumpet battle between (at least, that's how it sounds to me) Blue Mitchell and Johnny Coles. This is first known recording of this Ornette Coleman composition by the Ray Charles band**.
Except for this tune (and maybe also for a little more than a minute of the Finale, where Brother Ray rendered some amazing falsetto scattin' &  whoopin'), the concert was a rather uninspired routine performance.

There's a second, incomplete, copy of the 7:30 p.m.-show on the 2nd (also aired by Europe-1):
  1. Doot Doot Dow (with Ray Charles Orchestra) (solo Ray Charles - as)
  2. Hallelujah I Love Her So
  3. Yours
  4. Georgia On My Mind
  5. Marie
  6. The Sun Died
  7. I've Got A Woman
  8. Yesterday
  9. Booty Butt (fragment) (with Ray Charles Orchestra)
  10. Intro Raelettes
  11. My Bonnie (solo Andy Ennis - ts)
  12. Don't Change On Me
  13. I Can't Stop Loving You (partial)
  14. ... [What'd I Say surely missing]
For a big part of the concert the orchestra sounded as if everyone was in a hurry. On a few tunes the sound of the band was dominated by the "Staxy" Hammond sounds of Truman Thomas.

Georgia (#4) was rendered in the old 'flute arrangement'. The version of Yours (#3), from the I'm All Yours album (1968), is the earliest known live performance of this tune.
The Genius took all time necessary for a magnificent rendition of The Sun Died (#6). Just as in the audio embedded above, Truman's organ playing provoked Charles to give I've Got A Woman (#7) an original, fast and driven, performance; in this version he even sang in an 'unknown tongue' at the end of the tune.
Regrettably, Ray decided to interrupt the instrumental Booty Butt (#9, a contemporary hit single in the U.S.) soon after the intro.

Personnel:
Musicians: Johnny Coles, Bill King, Blue Mitchell - trumpets; Glenn Childress, Henry Coker, Fred Murrell, Joe Randazzo - trombones; Jay Cloyd Miller, Curtis Peagler - alto saxophones; Andy Ennis, David Newman - tenor saxophones; Leroy Cooper - baritone saxophone, band leader; Ernie Elly - drums; Ben Martin - guitar; Edgar Willis- bass; Truman Thomas - organ. The Raelettes: Susaye Greene, Mable John, Vernita Moss, Estella Yarbrough.

*This post replaces two earlier articles on the radio-broadcast concerts. **The tune was alsotaped the next year at two concerts in Paris, and one in Torino.