In the liner notes to Columbia/Legacy's 2005 reissue of 
Ray Charles' 1984 album 
Friendship Gregg Geller calls the record "the crowning achievement" of the phase of 
Ray's career where he "would cater to current tastes and draw from contemporary sources." That's an accurate assessment of the LP in two ways: first of all, 
Friendship was a big hit, really the last genuine hit when 
Charles was alive, reaching number one on the country charts, where it stayed for 70 weeks; second, it is the pinnacle of his '80s country-pop records, the one where 
Ray truly captured the sound of the era (as evidenced by its chart success), thanks in no small part to producer 
Billy Sherrill, who gave this the same clean, slick, punchy sound that he brought to many of the Columbia/Epic records he produced in the early '80s. Of course, that doesn't necessarily make 
Friendship a great record, or even a good one. The very things that made it a hit in 1984 make it very dated -- apart from a cut or two, such as the good-humored opener, "Two Old Cats Like Us," the songs are as generic as Nashville product comes, and the overly bright sound of the album may have made it slip easily onto the charts in 1984, but has lost whatever charm it had over the years. Nevertheless, this is a record made by old pros, so it's never bad. At its best -- meaning when there is some real interaction between 
Ray and his guests, as there is with 
Hank Williams, Jr. (the aforementioned "Two Old Cats Like Us"), 
the Oak Ridge Boys ("This Old Heart [Is Gonna Rise Again]"), and 
George Jones ("We Didn't See a Thing") -- it's merely pleasant; at it's worst, it's simply dull, and duets between 
Ray and such greats as 
Merle Haggard, 
Johnny Cash, and 
Willie Nelson simply should not be dull, yet they are here and sound even duller with decades of hindsight. While 
Friendship is by no means embarrassing, it's also not particularly interesting, and it's more of a testament to the power of 
Sherrill's Music City machine than it is to 
Charles' greatness. [The 2005 reissue includes two bonus tracks, neither of which fit the musical template of the album: a duet with 
Tony Bennett on 
James Taylor's "Everybody Has the Blues" and a duet with 
Billy Joel on 
Billy's "Baby Grand." Neither fit musically with the rest of the album, but they're both better cuts than anything on 
Friendship proper.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine