Just Between Us (Ray Charles album) explained

Just Between Us
Type:Album
Artist:Ray Charles
Cover:Just Between Us (Ray Charles album).jpg
Released:July 1988
Studio:RPM Studios, Johannesburg
Genre:R&B, soul, country soul
Label:Columbia
Producer:Ray Charles (all tracks), Quincy Jones (track 5)
Prev Title:Ray Charles Live
Prev Year:1973
Next Title:Would You Believe?
Next Year:1990

Just Between Us is an album by the American singer Ray Charles, released by Columbia Records in 1988.[1] The songs included on it represents all the styles that Charles performed until the early 1990s, which combined R&B, soul, country, blues and pop.

Track listing

  1. "Nothing Like a Hundred Miles" (James Taylor)
  2. "I Wish I'd Never Loved You at All" (K. Morrison Phelps, R. Hice)
  3. "Too Hard to Love You" (Jim Johnson)
  4. "Now I Don't Believe That Anymore" (David A. Morgan)
  5. "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" (George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin)
  6. "Stranger in My Hometown" (Percy Mayfield)
  7. "Over the Top" (Tony Colton, Keith Christopher)
  8. "I'd Walk a Little More for You" (Ken Hirsch, Doc Pomus)
  9. "If That's What'cha Want" (Dave Loggins)
  10. "Save the Bones for Henry Jones" (Danny Barker, Vernon Lee)

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. News: Just Between Us (Ray Charles). Chicago Tribune.