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charles wayne hendricks

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Ray Charles' Son Charles Wayne Hendricks: Everything You Need To Know

His parents, Ray Charles and Margie Hendricks, brought him into the world on October 1, 1959.

His private life is mostly hidden from the public eye, and very little is known about him.


Charles Wayne Hendricks Jr.'s father?

He was an American singer, songwriter, composer, and pianist. As a pioneer of soul music, he combined rhythm and blues, gospel, and blues styles. In addition to such hits as 'Hit the Road Jack,' 'Georgia On My Mind,' and 'Unchain My Heart,' Ray Charles is regarded as the 'Father of Soul Music,' whose impact on music continues to be felt several years after his death. He was best known for his secular lyrics and popular jazz arrangements. During his five-decade career, he inspired many musicians and singer/songwriters. His music, personal life, and career were not affected by his visual impairment, which helped make him an even bigger international star. Charles loved to shoulder responsibilities and was extremely friendly with his peers. His pleasing, amicable personality makes him one of the 'godfathers' of soul music today. In the world of music, his songs continue to resonate from 'Confession Blues' to 'What'd I Say'


Childhood and education

In 1936, Ray Charles Robinson was born to Bailey Robinson, a laborer, and Aretha Williams (or Reatha). His mother worked as a sharecropper as a teenage orphan. During Robinson's childhood, he lived in Greenville, Florida with his father and his wife, Mary Jane Robinson. Robinson family members had informally adopted Aretha, and she adopted the surname Robinson. After becoming pregnant by Bailey, she left Greenville late in the summer of 1930 for Albany, Georgia to be with family members for the baby's birth, then returned to Greenville with the child. As a result, she and Mary Jane shared Ray's upbringing. In his later years, he recalled his mother's perseverance, self-sufficiency, and pride as guiding lights in his life. He's been abandoned by his father, who has left Greenville and married someone else.

Charles showed an interest in mechanical objects in his early years and often observed his neighbors working on their cars and farm machinery. Charles' musical curiosity was sparked by Wylie Pitman's Boogie Woogie playing on an old upright piano at Wylie Pitman's Red Wing Cafe when he was three years old. Pitman subsequently taught Charles to play the piano. The Red Wing Cafe always welcomed Charles and his mother, even when they were in financial trouble. Ray's younger brother George would also be cared for by Pitman, so their mother would be relieved of some of the burden. His mother drowned him in her laundry tub when he was four years old.

The glaucoma that caused Charles to lose his sight at the age of four or five led him to be blind by the age of seven. A blind African-American student with no education, Aretha (or Reatha) Robinson used her connections in the local community to locate a school that would accept her after losing her younger son. In spite of his initial protests, Charles attended Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind in St. Augustine from 1937 to 1945.

Ray Charles married twice during his lifetime. He married Eileen Williams in July 1951 and they had no children. Della Beatrice Howard Robinson was his second wife from 1955 to 1977. Does Ray Charles have any illegitimate children? There are 12 kids with ten different women mentioned in the official sources.

He had three children by his second wife, Della Bea Robinson. The rest were the result of affairs with different women.

Charles Wayne Hendricks' mother?

She was born on March 13, 1935, to Kattie and Renzy Hendrix in Bulloch County, Georgia.[1] Her parents were Kattie and Renzy Hendrix. When she was 18, she moved to New York City and signed a record deal with Lamp Records. Her first three singles, "Everything", "Good Treatment", and "Every Time", did not chart, so she left the label in 1955. After the death of Beulah Robertson in 1956, Dorothy Jones and Darlene McCrea joined her in the Cookies. Atlant Records signed the group, and their single "In Paradise" reached No. 9 on the R&B chart. Additionally, they started working at Atlantic as session singers and were introduced to Ray Charles. A song called "Leave My Woman Alone" was auditioned by The Cookies for Charles. Hendrix and McCrea left the Cookies in 1958 and formed the Raelettes as Ray's backing singers.


Ray Charles and the Raelettes

Ray Charles recorded his first R&B chart song with the Raelettes in October 1958, called "Night Time Is the Right Time". There was a mutual attraction between Hendrix and Charles as they spent more time together and soon they began an affair while Ray was still married. A few months after she gave birth to Charles Wayne Hendricks, Margie tried to convince Ray to leave Della Beatrice Howard and live with her and their son, but he refused. Hendrix's relationship with Ray began to crumble in the early 1960's, and she later started to use alcohol and heroin, and her career began to suffer. Drug use began to affect her appearance and behavior with the Raelettes like picking fights during recording sessions, missing performances, and showing up drunk to performances. She recorded the last song she recorded with Ray in 1964 when the Raelettes released the single "A Lover's Blues", which featured Hendrix on lead vocals. As a result of a heated and possibly physically violent argument with Charles during a tour in Europe in July 1964, Hendrix was officially fired by the Raelettes after a heated argument in Europe.

 

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