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Around that time, Tate's 1967 album "Get It While You Can," considered a classic by soul aficionados, was reissued on CD. On the liner notes, Ragovoy wrote that the singer was probably dead. In 2001, a chance meeting at a grocery store between Tate and a former member of Harold Melvin's Blue Notes tipped off the music world that he was alive. And in 2003, he returned to the recording studio -- Ragovoy's Atlanta studio
-- to make "Rediscovered," which was nominated for a Grammy for best contemporary blues record the next year. At the time, Ragovoy was amazed that his protege's voice sounded the same as it had 30 years earlier
-- maybe better. Tate said he believed it was "a call from God" that brought him back to the music industry he had "hated and despised so bad." Over the next five years, he toured and released a live record and three more studio CDs. For Blavat, it was gratifying to see someone whose career was cut short at first getting critical praise. "They finally," he said, "knew what I knew about this cat."
[Associated
Press;
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Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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