When I was growing up, I remember watching music shows from Nashville, and I saw this white haired man constantly. That white haired guy was Charlie Rich. I never knew much about his older music, but I am really getting into it.
After a stint in the Air Force, Rich started writing his own songs and playing around Memphis, the city that ended up shaping him more than anything else. Memphis in the 1950s was a blend of blues, country, gospel, and early rock and roll, and Rich fit right into the middle. He wasn’t a purist of any genre; he was a blender, and that would become his signature for the rest of his career.
His big break came when he walked into Sun Records, though it wasn’t exactly instant stardom. Sam Phillips didn’t quite know what to do with him because Rich didn’t fit the Sun mold. He wasn’t a raw rocker like Jerry Lee Lewis, and he wasn’t a rockabilly guy like Carl Perkins. He was smoother, jazzier, more complicated.
Before he became the “Silver Fox” singing Behind Closed Doors, he was a studio guy down in Memphis, searching for the sound that matched his style. Midnight Blues, recorded in 1960 for Sun, captures that in-between phase perfectly, smoky, late-night melancholy set to a subtle shuffle.
Some singers have a pain in their voice, such as Richard Manuel of the Band. Charlie Rich’s early Sun Records is like that as well. What always blows me away with Rich is that he could sound both heartbroken and confident at the same time. This song has a little bit of everything in it. He had one of those voices that could blend into anything, from country to soul, jazz, or blues.
He would go on to have nine country number ones in the 1970s. Lonely Weekends was his first US hit. It hit #27 on Cash Box in 1960.
Midnight Blues
Midnite, you know you’re doing me wrongMidnite, doing me wrongKeeping me up all night longAll night, all night longEverytime I feel a little bit freeI hear those blues, midnite bluesCommence to calling meMidnite, why don’t you leave me aloneLeave me, leave me aloneI’m trying my best to make a happy homeHappy, happy homeEverytime I feel a little bit freeI hear those blues, midnite bluesCommence to calling meI just can’t help to feel a little bit ashamedEverytime I hear you call my nameI’m blaming you for all the bad things I’ve doneBlame you for what I’ve doneStill I will admit that every once in a while it was fun
Yeah but midnite, don’t keep me running aroundDon’t keep running aroundI made up my mind, I’m gonna settle downAh ha, settle downEverytime I feel a little bit freeI hear those blues, midnite bluesBlues, midnite bluesI hear those blues, midnite bluesCommence to calling meThat blues is a calling meMidnite blues is a calling me
…

Class act!
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A very talented guy and his early stuff like this is great. I just can’t completely filter out his stunt at the CMA in 1975. Although it didn’t seem to hurt his career much.
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Yea I remember reading about that…I knew nothing about is earlier stuff at all.
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Randy, please do tell!
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He burned John Denvers winning ballot at the CMA awards. He said it wasn’t personal but that is pretty personal to me. Plus he won the award the year earlier and wasn’t nominated for anything.
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Oh boy. That’s what happens when you get too attached to winning.
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Love this man’s voice and music. My oldest sister and I shared a room, and when “Behind Closed Doors” came out, she had the album. I used to make fun of her about it, but secretly I liked it. She used to play it so much, I knew the words to all the songs too. She was old enough to remember “Mohair Sam” and other older songs of his. Later on, I looked into his older material and found a treasure trove. If you really want to hear pain in his voice, listen to “Feel Like Going Home” (especially the solo demo version). Very good.
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Sounds like my sister lol…the only older song I knew is Mohair Sam….and thats because of the Beatles connection…they liked it around the time they met Elvis.
Ok…I’ll listen to that now!
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I never really heard his early stuff, he sounds more like Elvis here than I would have guessed. Fits in well with some John Denver in a playlist, LOL
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LOL… yea he does sound really good…a Sun Records guy that did a bit of everything.
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I like his piano playing on “Midnite Blues”, too!
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I know Charlie Rich had two big hits in the UK with ‘The Most Beautiful Girl in The World’ and ‘Behind Closed Doors’. Apart from that, I didn’t much about him.
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Not many know this earlier stuff at all…it’s good though…I love about anything on Sun Records.
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Charlie was the man.
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Great song!!! It’s got a bit of an Elvis and The Jordanaires vibe. Given “Midnight Blues” was cut at Sun Records, I bet that’s not a coincidence!
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Anything Sun Records and I’m listening!
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There was just something magic about this place!
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Great!
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Just flat out good stuff.
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It is man…I listened to a lot of his early stuff this week. Incredibly rich voice…no pun intended…plus his playing.
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Midnight Blues sounds like it should have been a way bigger hit.
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It should have been but it wasn’t the first or last time that the charts just plain out fail completely. Yea…I am negative about charts lol.
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I dont pay any attention. The only charts that matter are my ear charts. Just to bad some of these deserving artists didnt get compensated for their work . I’m guessing Charlie was in for the long run. A talented guy.
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Yes he was…I’m glad he finally got paid with a lot of success in the country field…
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Amen, CB. “Ear charts” is a perfect term for it.
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Yes Lisa it’s our own personal charts that count
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I only know his older stuff, here he is trying different styles, theres a distinct Elvis influence in ‘Midnite Blues.’
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He wrote and sang some great tunes, more of a crossover from country to pop. Died much too young.
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The 2nd one is a quality production. It’s hard not to think of Elvis, but he has his own kind of sass. Difficult to link this song with Behind Closed Doors. Didn’t he also do a song Most Beautiful Girl or something close.
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Yes he did that one as well…I remember those two when I was a kid. He had a lot of country #1’s and I’m glad he made it after trying so much with Sun Records.
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I love the angst in that song. “I woke up this morning, realized what I had done. I stood alone in the cold grey dawn, knew I’d lost my morning sun. I lost my head and I said some things. Now comes the heartache that the morning brings….” The melody is precious.
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It really is and his piano playing is great as well. This part of his career was looked over.
Oh you wanted to know what Randy was talking about…
At the 1975 CMA Awards, Charlie Rich, the previous year’s Entertainer of the Year, shocked the audience by setting fire to the card with John Denver’s name after announcing him as the new winner. The incident, widely seen as a protest against the growing pop influence in country music, was likely fueled by both alcohol and medication, which Rich claimed was a poor combination.
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haha! He thought John Denver was too pop. That’s so funny!
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Yea…he should have just voiced his concerns lol…not set something on fire…but…saying that…I get where he was coming from but I don’t think that was the best way of doing it! He REALLY wouldn’t like today’s bro country.
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Max, exactly. If I hear another song about a truck I’m going to lose it.
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Max, Charlie was one of my mother’s favorite singers. It was nice to see him featured here. I heard a lot of him as a young-un.
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Mine as well Bruce…she loved him.
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He’s got a great voice. I first heard this in a cover by Imelda May, who does lots of covers of old rockabilly tunes.
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