One of the several under-rated albums in the career of Ray Stevens is this one from 1977. Feel The Music was unique as you can see...Ray's picture didn't appear on the front of the album. Instead, Ray's picture appeared on the back...a publicity picture of sorts. The album consisted of 10 love ballads and a couple of inspirational songs, which the title track, "Feel the Music", falls under. It was released on the Warner Brothers label and it featured two chart singles. "Get Crazy With Me" and "Dixie Hummingbird" were released as singles from this album...although neither of the songs reached Top-40 status, "Dixie Hummingbird" came the closest...peaking in the Top-45. The song carried a bluesy feel and it featured several places in the song where Ray hums along to the rhythm while a saxophone is heard as the lead accompaniment. It's a sexy song, actually, if you pay attention to the lyrics and I imagine that underlying element is what caused it to connect with some country music buyers in 1977. Given that Ray has an expressive voice you can tell he's got a grin on his face while singing various parts of the song. The title track, "Feel the Music", starts out with just a piano and Ray asking if anyone out there's ever felt as if they don't belong and if they're living for themselves or living to please someone else. If so, that's when you gotta feel the music...and not waste time trying to be what others wish you to be.
The thing about Ray is that chart positions and critical acclaim didn't seem to be as important to him as the song itself. As I've mentioned in several other blog entries, Ray wanted the songs he recorded to sound great, whether they were commercial or not. In some circles, commercialism isn't looked at too highly by the pop music purists who feel an artist should write or perform songs based on their personal feelings, not based on the "current sound" or what might get radio airplay. Again, much like the argument over what's considered off-limits for comedy, commercialism vs. non-commercialism is an argument that's debatable with no end in sight.
This is an image of the actual Feel The Music album. The picture at the start of the blog is a copy of the publicity poster that Warner Brothers issued along with the vinyl album. "Get Crazy With Me" featured a rather alternative arrangement...something you'd not expect to hear on a Ray Stevens song. I can't really describe the arrangement...it has a lot of new-age instrumentation...if that's the correct phrase to describe it. The synthesizer and other instruments are heard throughout this particular recording. As a commercial single it peaked in the Top-80 on the country music chart...which meant that it didn't really have much radio airplay, if any at all, but because it was a single on a major record label and Ray having an established career and audience, it shown some signs of sales and it sort of charted on the strength of early sales reports and maverick airplay.
In addition to "Feel The Music" being inspirational, we have the gospel feel of "Save Me From Myself" which incorporates a lot of over-dubbing on the part of Ray. He performed all the voices in this song, from tenors to bass, spliced them all together and created the gospel choir effect. The song is about two people separating...and the man asking for help because he can't see any point in anything anymore. "Set The Children Free" is in the inspirational vein as well. This song is about adults setting the children inside ourselves free...it's basically a song that says that it's okay for adults to have fun and act like kids every now and then. Some people feel that once you reach adult-hood you have to be serious, strict, and mature all the time.
But let's not think that Feel The Music is nothing but inspirational songs. It has it's share of love ballads, too. "Daydream Romance" is one of the more romantic songs...not exactly as in your face as "Dixie Hummingbird" is. "Daydream Romance" tells the story of an entertainer out on the road who has to leave his wife but he finds himself having daydreams about her. It's a straight-ahead pop love ballad. Meanwhile, "Road Widow" tackles a similar theme but in this song instead of Ray having daydream's about his wife it's about a couple who are constantly split-up because of the man's job as a singer but they don't let it create turmoil because they stay in touch with phone calls. The wife is called a road widow because she's lost her husband to the road. In the song it's explained that the wife knew the man was an entertainer who traveled the country but she chose him to be her husband in spite of it.
There's one song on here that isn't country or pop...while "Dixie Hummingbird" carried a sort of bluesy/dixieland feel, "Junkie for You" carries an R&B feel. It's half-narrative and half-singing...we hear Ray comparing his lover to a drug and because of this he's become a junkie for her even though the habit's become more expensive day after day. "Alone With You" has a mis-leading title. The song isn't about all of the fun a guy can have with a woman once he gets her alone...instead, the song is about a couple who have grown apart mentally and even though they're physically still a couple, their relationship is empty. This causes Ray to state that he feels all alone with the woman because the love has died.
"Blues Love Affair" carries a bluesy-country arrangement as you would expect given it's song title. In this song Ray sings about relationships in general and wonders why opposites attract and why finding the right person isn't easy. The resulting effect of never finding the right person leads one down the road of one-night stands and sordid affairs, or a "Blues Love Affair" in this case.
Feel The Music was Ray's second album release for Warner Brothers. It was a follow-up to 1976's Just For The Record. This 1977 album is a direct opposite from the 1976 collection of songs and that's as it should be. Several of the songs from this 1977 album were issued on CD in 1995 as part of Warner Brothers various compilation projects: Do You Wanna Dance, The Serious Side of Ray Stevens, and Cornball. Those 1995 releases have been re-released as MP3 digital albums for anyone wanting to hear Ray's recordings for Warner Brothers since the material is out of print in CD format. Beware, though...there are several Warner Brothers recordings that were not issued on CD in 1995 and those recordings still have yet to be re-issued. "Junkie For You" and "Get Crazy With Me" from this 1977 album were not among the songs that were re-issued on CD in 1995. So, the only way to hear those particular songs is to have the vinyl album of Feel The Music, which I do. You can find it for sale at on-line auction sites.
Track List:
1. Feel The Music
2. Daydream Romance
3. Blues Love Affair
4. Alone With You
5. Junkie For You
6. Get Crazy With Me
7. Save Me From Myself
8. Road Widow
9. Set The Children Free
10. Dixie Hummingbird
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