Can you tell us about your time with Ray Charles' backing band, The Raelettes?
Right after we cut 'Gone With The Wind', I got a Gig working with a Rhythm and Blues Band in Sydney Australia at the famous King's Cross Whisky A-Go-Go. That was a fabulous experience. After I sang on the Sydney Tonight Show without the band, they separated me from the band and booked me into a showroom in the Hotel Australia in Adelaide Australia with a 10-piece jazz band. The night before I was scheduled to leave Australia after four months, My Australian buddy insisted on going to the Armory to see my friends who were working with Ray Charles (Billy Preston, drummer Billy Moore and the band manager, Curtis Amy,who later played all of the horns on Carol King's Tapestry Album). It was freezing cold, and I really wanted to go back to the hotel. Curtis Amy was then married to one of the Raelettes, Merry Clayton. My friend, drummer Billy Moore had quit the band just before their Australian tour. Curtis Amy and Billy Preston took me into R.C.'s dressing room before the show - and R.C. did that 'I can guess your weight by holding your wrist' thing, which was really uncanny, because he guessed my weight accurately. After the show, we hung around the dressing room talking about music. R.C. sat at the piano, moving his fingers around the chords, soon, the subject turned to obscure tunes. It isn't commonly known how much R.C. loved songs - all kinds of songs in every genre - he was what is known as a 'tune junkie' and so am I (he and I would have 'tune contests', to see if one of us could come up with a song the other didn't know. Of course, he usually won, but I 'got' him every now and then.) I think the fact that I knew so many songs in so many areas is what set me apart from other singers he'd worked with, which amazed me, because he was surrounded by great singers. The Raelettes at that time were Clydie King, Merry Clayton, Alex Brown, who was named Brandi Alexander by R.C.'s manager, Joe Adams) and Gwendolyn Berry. Alex Brown went on to become one of Stevie Wonder's long-time background singers. I was leaving Australia the day after we met, and I thought that was the end of that. I'm currently in the process of completing a Ray Charles Tribute CD called, 'My Days With Ray' that includes the first song we sang together that night, ('This Is The Moment' - he played a chord and sang the first line and I sang the next one - we were both delighted, because it's not a song that most people have ever heard.) My tribute CD is a collection of special songs that I knew R.C. loved and were apart of the two and a half years I spent with him.Three months after I returned to Los Angeles from Australia, my Mom answered the phone and she was thrilled when she realized who was calling. I wasn't there, and when I got home, my Mother said, 'You'd better sit down. Ray Charles wants to produce an album for you.' As it turned out, R.C. cut 2-3 tunes at a time, in between his tour dates. These 4 or 5 recording sessions were very big, with strings on top of the Ray Charles 18-piece band. The arrangements were written by Sid Feller who produced Ray's 'Georgia On My Mind'. What was the real Ray Charles like behind his public persona?
For that year and a half while we were recording the album 'Rita Graham Vibrations', I got to know R.C. without all the trappings of the International Star. We were in private sessions in the studio and he told me so much of his life and inner feelings. We talked about everything - his drug addiction, and his trials and tribulations to over-come it - his Mother's strength and her determination to make him independent - his blindness - and his intuitive and wise philosophies. At that time, R.C. would fly by himself all over the world, if he had somewhere he wanted to go, and he would leave the show to come to L.A. to work with me. The 'Vibrations' album is comprised mainly of old standards, with only two 'original' songs, all personally chosen by Ray Charles. To this day, I am the only single female/Raelette for whom R.C. produced a major recording on his own label, Tangerine Records, that was then distributed by ABC Paramount (TRC1507). I believe the 'Rita Graham Vibrations' album has remained a popular seller to this day?
I've noticed that several labels are re-producing and selling 'Rita Graham Vibrations' on E-Bay and I'm wondering how that's done, so that I can sell it myself! I read somewhere that the success of the 'Vibrations' album had an adverse affect on the other Raelettes?
I didn't know it at the time, but years later, I realized that once it was known that my album was released, it became the 'straw that broke the camel's back' for R.C.'s Raelettes. They all quit one night while the show was booked into L.A.'s Premiere night club, the Cocoanut Grove in the Ambassador Hotel. The next morning after I had been at the Grove, 'glowing' to everyone about my album that Ray Charles had produced, R.C. called me and asked me to be at his office in the Washington Boulevard RPM Studios within the hour. Two other girls there, Beverly LeShure and Susaye Green and I, made up the new (Instant) Raelettes. That night, we were standing on the stage of the Grove, and I was a nervous wreck. Unlike the other girls, I'd had no experience with harmony and group singing, because I'd never been a church singer and I'd never been with any singing group, except for solo work with a professional choir when I was eleven.
I did several concerts as a Raelette, while enduring the rigors of traveling with a large entourage and trying to understand how Ray Charles seemed to forget the spectacular recording project that he had created and handed me on a silver platter. He said my vocal quality was unique and that he loved the 'Vibrations' album, but no promotion was provided for it. I'd hoped that I was finally going to get some PR for that album, and some recognition for it since it had just been released to good reviews. It became clear to me that being a Raelette was a 'behind-the-scenes' positon, one in which very few people even knew the names of the girls in the back-up group. I had just finished a major album, and I told R.C. how confused I was about his attitude toward the project. He was furious when I quit - he was famous for his temper tantrums - but over the years, we made up and remained good friends. He came to Atlanta about three years before he died and I had the pleasure of opening for him at Sambuca, where I still sing. (Since May, 1999) Seeing him for the last time in Atlanta, I was able to let him know again that I was grateful for his loving genorosity in my life. 
I was surprised when you told me recently that you'd done some work with Sherlie Matthews who we featured on this website in December 2008
In the late sixties, a friend named Frank Walker formed an 8-voice group, ala The Manhattan Transfer. This was where I met Sherlie Matthews, who was one of the four female voices. Frank Walker had led a sparkling 4-voice vocal group called The Zeniths that had worked in Las Vegas and had been managed by the Platter's manager, Buck Ram. Unfortunately, Walker's new 8-voice group wasn't together long enough to have had a name. I never got to know the other singers in this group.Can you tell us about you time with Mike Post?
When I met Mike Post he was Music Director of the NBC Andy Williams Show. I was signed to Mike Post Productions long before he became TV's most prolific and well known composer. He had enjoyed one hit record, Mason Williams' 'Classical Jazz' and he had a production deal with Bell Records, that later became Arista Records. I was the only female artist he had signed and I thought this one would be a great fit for me. We cut several singles, including a great J.J. ('You Don't Know How I Feel - It's AllRight') Jackson dance/soul song called 'Black Daylight'. I don't know what happened to any of these recordings. Up until the Age of the Internet, an artist without strong management had no 'clout' at all, and was usually 'left in the dark' about the direction of their products. I loved working with Mike, who made great records, but after three years and eight single recordings that he produced for me, his career began to take off in another direction, as he found his niche in composing TV music-- 'Rockford Files', 'Hill Street Blues', 'A-Team', 'Law and Order', and many others.
At the same time, I was working with one of the Big Bands of the 40s, The Harry James Orchestra, in Las Vegas' Desert Inn Casino. I worked with Harry James at London's famous Ronnie Scott's Club, and the Opposite Lock in Birmingham, along with a concert at London's Victoria and Albert Hall and an appearance with Harry's band on the BBC Jazz Show. We also toured the Orpheum Theatres in the UK, and several venues in the United States in the 21/2 years I spent with that band. I left Harry James to fulfill a tour of the Far East that was wonderful, and was the first of several trips to Japan. You appeared in a musical at one point?
I played the female lead of Coretta Scott King, in the joyous Civil Rights musical, 'Selma' that began in a church basement in Los Angeles, California - then on to the Inner-City Theatre in Los Angeles, where it ran 6-nights a week for over a year. The comedian, Redd Foxx produced it on a grander scale that ran for three months at the Huntington Hartford Theatre in Hollywood - and again, Producer Woodie King, Jr. presented 'Selma' off-off Broadway in 1983, at the New Federal Theatre, New York. Although I originated the role of Coretta Scott King, I am not singing the 'Coretta' role on the 'Selma' cast album recorded by Atlantic Records, due to contract conflicts, but I had permission to sing in the chorus. What was your involvement with CBS Records?
There was a brief period when I was signed to CBS Records with ex-Motown producer/writer, Johnny Bristol (Jr. Walker's recordings and Diana Ross' 'Someday We'll Be Together') who took me to CBS, but he became disenchanted with CBS, and pulled out of his production deal, leaving me without a producer, and conseqently without product. You recorded a song for the Motown owned 'Prodigal' label
The recording 'Rich Man, Poor Man' was produced by an independent producer named Joe Harrelson, and was arranged by my ex-husband, a brilliant composer/arranger named Charles Blaker. Charles also arranged the first two sides I recorded for Mike Post, 'Baby I Can't Tell You'/ and the lullabye, 'Can I Go With You?' that Charles and I wrote. The single, 'Rich Man, Poor Man' was sold to Motown's Prodigal Records, and for some reason, those who could promote this lovely recording, dropped the ball, even after it received intense play and response in the Pacific Northwest. I didn't know anyone at Motown at that time, and didn't know how to obtain the promotion the record needed. A few years later, I recorded several singles with saxaphonist Steve Hooks, that I co-wrote and co-produced. Nothing has ever happened with these recordings, although I still like the way they sound. Steve now lives and works in Munich, Germany and is currently working on finalizing the tracks for my Ray Charles Tribute CD, produced by my sister, Anna Richardson, and I. This new CD should be finished in the early spring, 2009. (www.Stevehooksmusik.com) Steve produced the final version of a 'live' CD that I recorded here in Atlanta, titled, 'Rita Graham Live At Sambuca Atlanta', and he supervised the final mixing and mastering of the Sambuca CD in Munich. The Sambuca CD is a collection consisting of a mixture of jazz standards, along with two blues and two original songs, that documented some of the music we still perform at Atlanta's famous jazz showroom.
Which songs are your personal favorites among your own recordings?
Concerning my own recordings, I love several of them for different reasons. Several cuts from the 'Vibrations' album - 'Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars' (R.C.s favorite), 'My Cup Runneth Over' and 'Charade'- the single 'Gone With The Wind Is My Love'- 'Never Make Your Move Too Soon' which is a Blues from the Sambuca CD - 'Wonder Worker', a love song that Steve Hooks and I wrote that I re-recorded on the 'live' Sambuca CD - the single, 'Rich Man, Poor Man'- and a duet single I recorded with Mike Post producing for Bell Records, in which I sang with a male vocalist named Bob Rheir, titled, 'You're Walkin' On The Outside of My Good Side'/'It's A Good Feelin' (two soul tunes), the artists' name on the record is 'Rye and Rita Jean' - these are among my favorites. Could you tell us about the Georgia Lagacy Foundation?
Currently, I'm Executive Secretary of the Georgia Legacy Foundation, www.GeorgiaLegacyFoundation.Org This organization, founded by The Crown Prince of the Blues, Sammy Blue, promises artists' support, along with education, concerts, and various means of 'keeping music alive' through preservation. You've toured the world singing, what are your fondest memories of the venues and countries you've visited?
The world is full of wonderful places and I've seen only a few of them - Sydney - Montreal - New York - Tokyo - Taiwan - Manila - Moscow - Atlanta - Los Angeles - London - and San Francisco all have that 'Big City' flash and bustle that inspire exploration of the museums, restaurants and shops. These cities all provided unforgettable experiences for me. A visit to the amazing National Museum in Taiwan, built into the side of a mountain that holds the largest collection of chinese artifacts outside of mainland China, was especially inspiring. I have also enjoyed singing in some of the world's great nightclubs that are closed now, and I do miss them. I hope that one day, every city will have at least one elegant 'Showroom' that features live entertainment, great food, and sophisticated, candlelit ambiance. Atlanta's Sambuca Jazz Cafe is apart of a chain of five restaurants in Dallas Texas, Houston Texas, Nashville Tennessee and Denver Colorado that all feature live entertainment, seven nights a week--and I believe that there are very few places like that left. I'm an 'active listener' who appreciates every nuance in the performance - I have great appreciation for a quiet room that features a sensitive sound system in perfect balance.

What projects are you currently involved in and will we be seeing you in the UK in the future?
People suggest that I should write a book about my experiences, but in all situations wherein I found myself, I wasn't privy to inner-workings, or intimate details. I didn't know why things happened the way they did. I've often wondered if anyone would be interested in a book that wasn't full of 'juicy' tid-bits. As a writer, I have compiled a 'Docu-Musical' titled 'Eagles In The Air' that introduces and celebrates the achievements of over l50 20thCentury African American women, many of whom have been 'lost in history'. I am also seeking a literary agent and a publisher for a suspense novel that I wrote. Meanwhile, I am so glad that people enjoy 'Gone With The Wind Is My Love'. I'd like to convey my deepest appreciation to you, the DeeJays, and the Fans of 'Northern Soul'- and I'm looking forward to appearing there in the near future!