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Ray Charles
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Ray Charles

Born 1930 · Joined the Ancestors 2004
Fact
Frank Sinatra called him "the only true genius in the business"
Fact
Invented soul music by fusing gospel and blues
Fact
"Georgia on My Mind" became the state song of Georgia

Ray Charles Robinson — Ray Charles — invented soul music by fusing the sacred sounds of the Black church with the secular rhythms of blues and jazz, a combination so audacious that some called it blasphemous and others recognized it as genius. His 1954 hit "I Got a Woman" took a gospel melody and put secular lyrics to it, creating a template that would define popular music for the next seventy years.

Born in Albany, Georgia, in 1930, Charles began losing his sight at age five — likely from untreated glaucoma — and was completely blind by seven. He attended the Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind, where he learned piano, composition, and arranging. Orphaned at fifteen, he struck out on his own, traveling the chitlin' circuit and developing the style that would change everything.

Charles's genius was his refusal to be confined by genre. He moved from R&B to country ("I Can't Stop Loving You" hit number one on the pop charts), from jazz standards to pop ballads, from gospel-infused soul to orchestral arrangements. He recorded "Georgia on My Mind" in 1960, and it became the state song of Georgia in 1979 — the same state that had once enforced the segregation he grew up under. Frank Sinatra called him "the only true genius in the business."

I was born with music inside me. Music was one of my parts.
— Ray Charles
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1930
Born September 23 in Albany, Georgia
1937
Completely blind by age seven; enrolls at Florida School for the Deaf and Blind
1954
"I Got a Woman" fuses gospel and blues — invents soul music
1960
"Georgia on My Mind" becomes his signature song
1962
Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music breaks genre barriers
1986
Among the first inductees into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

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