What'd I Say (album)

What'd I Say is an album by the American musician Ray Charles, released by Atlantic Records in late 1959. His sixth album since the debut Ray Charles in 1957, What'd I Say compiled a range of Charles' material, including his first top 10 hit, the title track "What'd I Say". The album became his first gold record, and is included in Robert Christgau's "Basic Record Library" of 1950s and 1960s recordings, published in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981).

Though routinely classified as a standard album, at the time of its 1959 release, it was more of a compilation of previously uncollected Charles material. It included recent singles ("That's Enough", "Tell Me How Do You Feel", "What'd I Say", all from 1959; and "My Bonnie", "Rockhouse", "What Kind Of Man Are You", "You Be My Baby", "Tell All The World About You" all issued in 1958), and tracks that had initially been issued as singles as far back as 1952 ("Roll With My Baby") and 1953 ("Jumpin' In The Mornin'").

Critical reception

Upon its release, a reviewer for Billboard referred to What'd I Say as "A fine, swinging album," and wrote that Charles "is at his best here."

Track listing

All music is composed by Ray Charles, except where indicated.

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."What'd I Say" 5:07
2."Jumpin' in the Mornin'" 2:43
3."You Be My Baby"Charles, Doc Pomus, Mort Shuman2:31
4."Tell Me How Do You Feel"Percy Mayfield2:43
5."What Kind of Man Are You" (lead vocal: Mary Ann Fisher) 2:51
Total length:15:55
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Rockhouse" 3:54
2."Roll with My Baby"Sam Sweet2:37
3."Tell All the World About You" 2:05
4."My Bonnie" 2:49
5."That's Enough" 2:47
Total length:14:12

Notes

  • On later reissues and some digital platforms, "What'd I Say" is listed as being in two parts: "What'd I Say – Part I" and "What'd I Say – Part II", or "What'd I Say (Pts. 1 and 2)"; "Rockhouse" is similarly listed as "Rockhouse – Part I" and "Rockhouse – Part II", or "Rockhouse (Pts. 1 and 2)".

Personnel

Technical

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article What'd I Say (album), released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.