Later year and success Ray Charles

In 1959, Charles went to Top 30 radio with the release of this impromptu blues number, "What I Say", was originally conceived while Charles was in concert. The song reached number one in the list of R & B and Charles will be the first top-ten single on the charts, peaking at number 6. Charles will also save a Genius Ray Charles, before leaving Atlantic for a more lucrative agreement with ABC-Paramount Records (later renamed ABC Records) in 1960 which gave Charles a higher rate of royalty, complete artistic control and possibly ownership of master tapes.
hit songs as "Georgia On My Mind" (U.S. # 1 Pop, # 3 R & B), "Hit the Road Jack" (U.S. # 1 pop and R & B), "One Mint Julep" (# 8 Pop , # 1 R & B) and "let go of My Heart" (# 9 Pop, # 1 R & B) to assist the transition to pop success, and the monumental 1962 album, Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music and his Modern Sounds in the following countries and Western Music, Vol. 2, helped lead the country in the course of music. His version of Don Gibson's song, I Can not Stop Loving You topped the charts pop for five weeks and remained at # 1 R & B for ten weeks in 1962. It also provides the number one record in England. In 1963, he founded his own label, Tangerine Recordswhich ABC-Paramount distributed. It also has a great success pop in 1963 with "Busted" (U.S. # 4) and take these chains From My Heart (U.S. # 8), and Top 20 four years later in 1967 with "Here We Go Again" (United USA # 15) (which is a duet with Norah Jones in 2004).

Ray Charles end.