Discussion:
The Number Ones: Ray Charles's "Hit the Road Jack"
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Bob Roman
2018-12-27 14:41:38 UTC
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Ray Charles – “Hit The Road Jack”
HIT #1: October 9, 1961
STAYED AT #1: 2 weeks

Certain songs feel like they’ve always existed, to the point where it’s strange to imagine them as being new, as being songs that people would hear on the radio for the first time. “Hit The Road Jack” is one of those. As we experience it today, it’s less a song, more of an all-purpose signifier of the idea that someone should get out. It’s what plays over the PA at the hockey arena when someone get sent to the penalty box. But of course, before all that, it was a pop single.

It’s a slight song, less than two minutes. The setup is simple: The woman knows she’s stuck with someone who isn’t worth shit, and she’s kicking him out. The guy begs and pleads for another chance, but he knows it’s hopeless. They’re following a script, and they know it. Maybe they’ve had this argument before. Maybe this really is the end. But the contours of it will always be familiar.

Charles isn’t the guy winning the argument, and he’s not the star of the song, either. That would be Margie Hendrix, leader of the Raelettes, Charles’ trio of backup singers. She shows so much fire and personality on “Hit The Road Jack” that it seems criminal that she was consigned to a backup singer role. But “Hit The Road Jack” would be the peak of her career. She was in a relationship with Charles, and they were doing a lot of the same drugs, and maybe having fights not too different from the one outlined in the song. (The song isn’t about their fling, though. Charles’ friend Percy Mayfield, a onetime singer whose performing career ended after a disfiguring car accident, was the one who wrote the song.) A couple of years after “Hit The Road Jack,” Charles fired Hendrix. He survived his addictions, but she didn’t; she died in 1973.

Charles was a genius at straddling genre lines, and “Hit The Road Jack” is a fine example. It’s an R&B song, but it pulls some of its swagger from big-band jazz, and some of its intensity from rock ‘n’ roll. It sounds tough, and simple, but the sounds are there to get the story across. It’s not the work of transcendent genius that Charles’ “Georgia On My Mind” was, but it remains plenty durable anyway.

GRADE: 7/10
Mark Dintenfass
2018-12-27 15:17:02 UTC
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Ray Charles ­ ³Hit The Road Jack²
HIT #1: October 9, 1961
STAYED AT #1: 2 weeks
Certain songs feel like they¹ve always existed, to the point where it¹s
strange to imagine them as being new, as being songs that people would hear
on the radio for the first time. ³Hit The Road Jack² is one of those. As we
experience it today, it¹s less a song, more of an all-purpose signifier of
the idea that someone should get out. It¹s what plays over the PA at the
hockey arena when someone get sent to the penalty box. But of course, before
all that, it was a pop single.
It¹s a slight song, less than two minutes. The setup is simple: The woman
knows she¹s stuck with someone who isn¹t worth shit, and she¹s kicking him
out. The guy begs and pleads for another chance, but he knows it¹s hopeless.
They¹re following a script, and they know it. Maybe they¹ve had this argument
before. Maybe this really is the end. But the contours of it will always be
familiar.
Charles isn¹t the guy winning the argument, and he¹s not the star of the
song, either. That would be Margie Hendrix, leader of the Raelettes, Charles¹
trio of backup singers. She shows so much fire and personality on ³Hit The
Road Jack² that it seems criminal that she was consigned to a backup singer
role. But ³Hit The Road Jack² would be the peak of her career. She was in a
relationship with Charles, and they were doing a lot of the same drugs, and
maybe having fights not too different from the one outlined in the song. (The
song isn¹t about their fling, though. Charles¹ friend Percy Mayfield, a
onetime singer whose performing career ended after a disfiguring car
accident, was the one who wrote the song.) A couple of years after ³Hit The
Road Jack,² Charles fired Hendrix. He survived his addictions, but she
didn¹t; she died in 1973.
Charles was a genius at straddling genre lines, and ³Hit The Road Jack² is a
fine example. It¹s an R&B song, but it pulls some of its swagger from
big-band jazz, and some of its intensity from rock Œn¹ roll. It sounds tough,
and simple, but the sounds are there to get the story across. It¹s not the
work of transcendent genius that Charles¹ ³Georgia On My Mind² was, but it
remains plenty durable anyway.
GRADE: 7/10
I might push it up a point, but basically he's got this one right.

Charles' collaboration with Mayfield, pushed into a parenthesis here,
deserves at least as much attention as his relations with Margie
Hendrix. (Our pal seems to be getting his info about that from the
biopic.) His stuff was perfectly suited to Ray's r&b side. "Busted" is
the one I like best.
--
--md
_________
Remove xx's from address to reply
SavoyBG
2018-12-27 16:59:39 UTC
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Post by Mark Dintenfass
Charles' collaboration with Mayfield, pushed into a parenthesis here,
deserves at least as much attention as his relations with Margie
Hendrix. (Our pal seems to be getting his info about that from the
biopic.) His stuff was perfectly suited to Ray's r&b side. "Busted" is
the one I like best.
What does "Busted" have to do with Percy Mayfield?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busted_(Harlan_Howard_song)
Mark Dintenfass
2018-12-27 17:05:57 UTC
Permalink
Post by SavoyBG
Post by Mark Dintenfass
Charles' collaboration with Mayfield, pushed into a parenthesis here,
deserves at least as much attention as his relations with Margie
Hendrix. (Our pal seems to be getting his info about that from the
biopic.) His stuff was perfectly suited to Ray's r&b side. "Busted" is
the one I like best.
What does "Busted" have to do with Percy Mayfield?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busted_(Harlan_Howard_song)
Hm. Got it muddled with "The Danger Zone." Both are great.
--
--md
_________
Remove xx's from address to reply
Tony
2018-12-27 15:18:12 UTC
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Post by Bob Roman
Ray Charles – “Hit The Road Jack”
HIT #1: October 9, 1961
STAYED AT #1: 2 weeks
Certain songs feel like they’ve always existed, to the point where it’s strange to imagine them as being new, as being songs that people would hear on the radio for the first time. “Hit The Road Jack” is one of those. As we experience it today, it’s less a song, more of an all-purpose signifier of the idea that someone should get out. It’s what plays over the PA at the hockey arena when someone get sent to the penalty box. But of course, before all that, it was a pop single.
It’s a slight song, less than two minutes. The setup is simple: The woman knows she’s stuck with someone who isn’t worth shit, and she’s kicking him out. The guy begs and pleads for another chance, but he knows it’s hopeless. They’re following a script, and they know it. Maybe they’ve had this argument before. Maybe this really is the end. But the contours of it will always be familiar.
Charles isn’t the guy winning the argument, and he’s not the star of the song, either. That would be Margie Hendrix, leader of the Raelettes, Charles’ trio of backup singers. She shows so much fire and personality on “Hit The Road Jack” that it seems criminal that she was consigned to a backup singer role. But “Hit The Road Jack” would be the peak of her career. She was in a relationship with Charles, and they were doing a lot of the same drugs, and maybe having fights not too different from the one outlined in the song. (The song isn’t about their fling, though. Charles’ friend Percy Mayfield, a onetime singer whose performing career ended after a disfiguring car accident, was the one who wrote the song.) A couple of years after “Hit The Road Jack,” Charles fired Hendrix. He survived his addictions, but she didn’t; she died in 1973.
Charles was a genius at straddling genre lines, and “Hit The Road Jack” is a fine example. It’s an R&B song, but it pulls some of its swagger from big-band jazz, and some of its intensity from rock ‘n’ roll. It sounds tough, and simple, but the sounds are there to get the story across. It’s not the work of transcendent genius that Charles’ “Georgia On My Mind” was, but it remains plenty durable anyway.
GRADE: 7/10
GRADE: 8/10
Dennis C
2018-12-27 15:29:20 UTC
Permalink
8/10 Margie bumps it a notch here as well
Roger Ford
2018-12-27 16:16:47 UTC
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On Thu, 27 Dec 2018 06:41:38 -0800 (PST), Bob Roman
Ray Charles =E2=80=93 =E2=80=9CHit The Road Jack=E2=80=9D
HIT #1: October 9, 1961
STAYED AT #1: 2 weeks
Always a favorite RC song (I give it a 9) this marked his first REAL
hit here in Britain. "Georgia" had just grazed the bottom of the chart
here but "Hit The Road Jack" took him all the way to #4 on the NME
chart in November 1961

Breihan of course has nothing to say about the background to the song
which was written by RC associate Percy Mayfield who made an acapella
demo version of the song in 1960 and apparently sent it to Art Rupe at
Specialty. That demo can be heard here



Eventually the song ended up back with Mayfield's long time friend RC
who (with Margie Hendrix & co in tow) recorded it at a June 1961
session for ABC-Paramount at which two other Mayfield songs were
waxed---"The Danger Zone" (chosen as the flip to "Hit The Road Jack"
and "But On The Other Hand Baby" (which became the flip to the first
song recorded at this session---"Unchain My Heart")

The song has subsequently been revived by a multitude of artists most
notably perhaps by Jerry Lee Lewis who released his version in 1963 as
his first single for Smash after leaving Sun Records.

ROGER FORD
-----------------------

"Spam Free Zone" - to combat unwanted automatic spamming I have added
an extra "m" in my e-mail address (***@mmail.com).
Please delete same before responding.Thank you!
Roger Ford
2018-12-28 20:20:35 UTC
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Post by Roger Ford
On Thu, 27 Dec 2018 06:41:38 -0800 (PST), Bob Roman
Ray Charles =E2=80=93 =E2=80=9CHit The Road Jack=E2=80=9D
HIT #1: October 9, 1961
STAYED AT #1: 2 weeks
Always a favorite RC song (I give it a 9) this marked his first REAL
hit here in Britain. "Georgia" had just grazed the bottom of the chart
here but "Hit The Road Jack" took him all the way to #4 on the NME
chart in November 1961
Breihan of course has nothing to say about the background to the song
which was written by RC associate Percy Mayfield who made an acapella
demo version of the song in 1960 and apparently sent it to Art Rupe at
Specialty. That demo can be heard here
http://youtu.be/rXGM8CG-lGs
Eventually the song ended up back with Mayfield's long time friend RC
who (with Margie Hendrix & co in tow) recorded it at a June 1961
session for ABC-Paramount at which two other Mayfield songs were
waxed---"The Danger Zone" (chosen as the flip to "Hit The Road Jack"
and "But On The Other Hand Baby" (which became the flip to the first
song recorded at this session---"Unchain My Heart")
The song has subsequently been revived by a multitude of artists most
notably perhaps by Jerry Lee Lewis who released his version in 1963 as
his first single for Smash after leaving Sun Records.
Forgot to remind everyone how the record did in the 1961 Singles
Battle!

R1
Post by Roger Ford
4 The Pentagons - I Wonder - Jamie 1201
24 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
R2
Post by Roger Ford
5 Jerry Butler - I'm-A Telling You - Vee Jay 390
23 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
R3
Post by Roger Ford
26 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
4 Elmore James - Rollin' And Tumblin' - Fire 1024
R4
Post by Roger Ford
15 Don & Juan - What's Your Name - Big Top 3079
18 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
R5
Post by Roger Ford
10 The Impressions - Gypsy Woman - ABC-Paramount 10241
21 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
R6
Post by Roger Ford
14 Ray Charles - Hit The Road Jack - ABC-Paramount 10244
18 The Corsairs - Smoky Places - Tuff 1808
ROGER FORD
-----------------------

"Spam Free Zone" - to combat unwanted automatic spamming I have added
an extra "m" in my e-mail address (***@mmail.com).
Please delete same before responding.Thank you!

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