Born in
Nashville, Tennessee, Sherrell began his career playing drums with fellow Nashville residents
Jimi Hendrix and
Billy Cox, practicing at a club a block from Hendrix's residence. Sherrell learned to play the guitar by washing the car (a
Jaguar) of
Curtis Mayfield in exchange for guitar lessons. Sherrell soon began teaching himself to play the bass after buying one from a local pawn shop for $69, which led him to join Johnny Jones & The King Kasuals Band,
Aretha Franklin's backing group. Sherrell joined
James Brown's band in August 1968, replacing
Tim Drummond after Drummond contracted
hepatitis in Vietnam. He played on some of Brown's most famous recordings of the late 1960s, including the #1 R&B hits "
Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud", "
Mother Popcorn", and "
Give It Up or Turnit a Loose" and more. Brown credited him with being his first bassist to incorporate playing techniques such as thumping on the strings that were adopted by other players, including
Bootsy Collins. In the 1970s, Sherrell rejoined Brown and performed with
The J.B.'s. He later played with
Al Green and
Maceo & All the King's Men. He played bass on Beau Dollar's Who knows, Marva Whitney's and Lyn Collins album. He sang on a few of Maceo Parker's albums. He also released some recordings with the band Past Present & Future with friends Wade Conklin, Sam Pugh, Ted Hughes, Gail Whitefield, Thomas Smith, and James Nixon and he recorded under the name Sweet Charles, including his first solo album, Sweet Charles:
For Sweet People, on James Brown's label
People Records and the Sweet Charles Sherrell
Universal Love album in 2017. Charles Sherrell died of
lung emphysema on March 29, 2023, at his home in The Netherlands. ==Discography==