Ray Charles The Genius Sings The Blues LP 180g Vinyl Mobile Fidelity Numbered Limited Edition MFSL USA

Title: The Genius Sings The Blues
Catalog Number: MFSL 1-337
Label: Atlantic
Reissued by: Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab
Barcode: 821797133715
Original release year: 1961
Reissue year: 2010
Number of discs: 1
Revolutions per minute: 33⅓ rpm
Disc size: 12"
Vinyl Weight Grade: 180gr
Limited Edition: Yes
Numbered Edition: Yes
Total Item Weight: 300gr
Pressing country: USA
For Market Release in: USA
Added to catalog on: March 19, 2017
Collection: MFSL Original Master Recording
Note: Never eligible for any further discounts
Vinyl Gourmet Club: No
Genius doesn’t even begin to describe the greatness of The Genius Sings the Blues. Comprised of a dozen songs Ray Charles made between 1952 and 1960, the collection was released in 1961 by Atlantic Records to counter the singer’s migration to rival ABC Paramount. What Atlantic originally underestimated is that the album contained many of Charles’ greatest works!
- Limited Edition
- Numbered Edition
- 180 Gram High Definition Vinyl pressed at RTI USA
- Half-Speed mastering on MFSL Gain 2 Ultra Analog System
- Analog Mastering by Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab
- Mastered by Shawn R. Britton
- Cut from the Original Analog Mono Master Tapes
- Special Static Free & Dust Free Inner Sleeves
- Deluxe Cover
1/4" / 15 IPS analog master direct to lathe
Ray Charles The Genius Sings the Blues on Numbered-Edition 180g Mono LP from Mobile Fidelity. 1961 Collection Gathers 12 Must-Have Songs from Charles' Peak Era. Mobile Fidelity Has Righted the Sonic Wrongs That Plagued Earlier Versions: Pure Mono Analog Sound.
Genius doesn’t even begin to describe the greatness of The Genius Sings the Blues. Comprised of a dozen songs Ray Charles made between 1952 and 1960, the collection was released in 1961 by Atlantic Records to counter the singer’s migration to rival ABC Paramount. What Atlantic originally underestimated is that the album contained many of Charles’ greatest works, all unified by their bluesy emotions and stirring arrangements. A classic of the soul and R&B canon, The Genius Sings the Blues is a snapshot of the evolution of timeless American music captured by the pianist’s indelible rhythmic pace, gospel roots, jazz backgrounds, and Southern-styled accents. And it’s never sounded so good.
From the iconic cover art (a photo of Charles taken by legendary photographer Lee Friedlander) to the distinguished music within, everything about the thematic record is iconic. Now, nearly 50 years later, it can be heard in pristine fidelity sourced from the original mono master tapes. Mobile Fidelity’s engineers have taken great pains to ensure that every clink of the piano keys, ache of Charles’ rolling voice, and rush of the backing arrangements sounds better than they have since first being recorded in the studio. This 180g mono LP simply lays waste to the competition.
Previous editions of The Genius Sings the Blues, including a remastered digital edition from Rhino, suffered from varying levels, distracting static and noise, and inconsistent vocal balances. Mobile Fidelity has gone back to the original mono master tapes to correct these problems, giving music lovers what is now unquestionably the best-sounding Charles album to stem from his peak era. And these performances are simply on fire.
Whether inhabiting the sadness in “Night Time (Is the Right Time)” or personifying the loss of “Hard Times,” Charles invests each song with supreme emotion and undeniable conviction that makes the lyrics ring true and the blues resonate with cathartic pathos. Uptempo country blues numbers (“I’m Movin’ On, “Early in the Mornin’”) balance the mournful slow fare, and again prove Charles a master composer, interpreter, and musician who could make any style his own. The Genius Sings the Blues also speaks to legendary jazz pianist Billy Taylor’s initial impressions of Charles upon hearing him in a way in which few other Charles recordings do.
Taylor recalled: “While playing through some new music for a projected Ruth Brown record date, I was asked to listen to an original song played and sung by a young composer and pianist from Seattle, Washington. I can still remember how surprised I was to hear this kind of music from a Northwesterner. He reminded me of Charles Brown, another pianist-singer who was very popular in the Forties, but he had a very personal sound and there was something different about his rhythmic approach. In his handling of melody he seemed to be using devices similar to those used by Dinah Washington and a small group of popular singers who allowed their gospel singing backgrounds to influence their interpretation of popular songs... I was intrigued by the emotional quality projected by both his piano playing and his unusual voice and was not surprised when Ahmet Ertegün said that he wanted to let the young musician record some of his own material. ‘He communicates just like the old blues singers,’ Ahmet said."
Indeed, that innate blues aesthetic dominates this collection, as does Charles’ distinctive rhythmic mannerisms. Finally, hear them as they’ve always been intended to be experienced.
Track Listing:
01. Early In the Mornin'
02. Hard Times (No One Knows Better Than I)
03. The Midnight Hour
04. The Right Time
05. Feelin' Sad
06. Ray's Blues
07. I'm Movin' On
08. I Believe To My Soul
09. Nobody Cares
10. Mr. Charles' Blues
11. Some Day Baby
12. I Wonder Who
Click here to listen to samples on YouTube.com ♫
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