NPR - All Things Considered · The late Ray Charles never recorded with the Count Basie Orchestra. But a new album features Charles singing "Let the Good Times Roll" with Count Basie's band.
The piece, one of 12 on the album Ray Sings, Basie Swings, is a digital mashup created by audio engineer and producer Gregg Field, who worked with Charles as a drummer and arranger in the '70s.
Last year, Field's colleagues discovered a box marked "Ray/Basie." Inside were tracks of unreleased recordings from the mid '70s.
From the CD, listen:
Let The Good Times Roll
Come Live With Me
Georgia On My Mind
"We thought we found the Holy Grail of jazz -- [that] they finally recorded together," Field says. "In fact, it was a live concert where Count Basie played a set of his own and Ray Charles played a set of his own with his band."
Hear Gregg Field talk about touring with Ray Charles
Hear Gregg Field explain exactly how he mashed Ray Charles and Count Basie together.
But the label gave audio producers the idea to digitally hybridize the two legends.
Field started with the never-released Charles recordings. The quality of sound on the tapes was so poor that Field had to digitally isolate Charles' voice frame by frame from the tracks. He then lined up each track from the old recording to new instrumental recordings from the contemporary Count Basie Orchestra.
The 5-month process was worth the effort, says Field.
"We were able to retain Ray's phrasing, which was very important to make the sound right," he says.
by Michele Norris npr.org
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June 12, 2004 A Tribute to Ray Charles
June 11, 2004 Ray Charles, American Legend, Dies at 73
June 13, 2004 Ray Charles Appreciation
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Jazz from Amazon.com
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