Ray Charles

This is an Exclusive Interview with Sheila Raye Charles and can only be heard here at MusicChartsMagazine.com

 

Raw, uncut and lasting over 40 minutes long.  Sheila Raye Charles’s story will leave you with hope, love and peace knowing that there are reasons for everything.  Sheila Raye Charles’s voice like her father Ray Charles has been and continues to be instrumental to so many lives. 

Sheila Raye Charles has a story like most of us do and she wants to share hers with you in this exclusive interview that is now available for you to hear right

HERE: 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sheila Raye Charles has visited and continues to visit villages, towns and cities across the United States and the world spreading her message of how Jesus Christ saved her life.

(As seen on the 700 Club – Christian Broadcasting Network www.CBN.com)

 

IntervieweeSheila Raye Charles

InterviewerBig Al Weekley

This Exclusive Interview ( as well as all other audio interviews found at www.MusicChartsMagazine.com ) are owned by Music Charts Magazine Corporation and may “NOT” be copied, used or placed anywhere without permission of Music Charts Magazine in writing.  Contact Music Charts Magazine at:  Contact@MusicChartsMagazine.com

Robert Calvin “Bobby” Bland (January 27, 1930 – June 23, 2013), also known as Bobby “Blue” Bland, was an American singer of blues and soul. He was an original member of the Beale Streeters, and was sometimes referred to as the “Lion of the Blues”.  Along with such artists as Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, and Junior Parker, Bland developed a sound that mixed gospel with the blues and R&B.  An imitator of Frank Sinatra, he was also known as the “Sinatra of the blues”; his music was also influenced by Nat King Cole.

Bland was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1981, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992, and received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997.

Bland was born in the small town of Rosemark, Tennessee.  Later moving to Memphis with his mother, Bland started singing with local gospel groups there, including amongst others The Miniatures.  Eager to expand his interests, he began frequenting the city’s famous Beale Street where he became associated with an ad hoc circle of aspiring musicians named, not unnaturally, the Beale Streeters.

Bland died on June 23, 2013 at his home in Memphis, Tennessee, after an ongoing illness. He was 83.

Read more at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Bland