July 6, 2009

Ray Stevens: The Mercury Recordings

Although Ray Stevens officially recorded for Mercury Records for two years, 1961-1963, in that two year span he recorded quite a number of sessions. I've touched upon Ray's material for Mercury Records in other blog entries but I still like the way the picture sleeve of this CD looks. It takes snippets of pictures from the 1970 release, The Best of Ray Stevens, and pastes them onto a new background with an early 1980's picture of Ray. I don't have much information about how many recordings Ray did for Mercury...all I know is the material that's surfaced over the years...the material that was included on his first two albums 1,837 Seconds of Humor and This Is Ray Stevens, more specifically.

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The Mercury Records material features the blend of pop, R&B, and novelty styles that would continue to be a big part of Ray's recordings. As the years went by he added country elements to his recordings. Through the years Ray's Mercury material has surfaced on a variety of LP's and tapes and CD's...and now MP3's. The above picture is the 1970 release featuring a more contemporary artist rendering of Ray...for whatever reason a lot of the Mercury subsidiaries like to put a modern-day picture of Ray Stevens on their releases when the material is clearly from the early '60s.

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The album/CD above is called Ahab the Arab as well. A lot of the Mercury re-issues use the name of a song.

In 1989, Mercury/Polygram released an eight song collection called Funny Man which featured eight songs already found on the other Mercury collections. The album cover resembles the one above...a profile picture of Ray in the yellow/tan suit.

In 1996 Polygram released All-Time Hits which featured 8 songs on cassette and 11 songs on CD. The material wasn't all Mercury, though...but a good amount was. Two songs, "Shriner's Convention" and "One More Last Chance" were from 1980 and 1981...recorded for RCA Records. The other songs were recorded for Mercury. The picture of Ray was a contemporary one...

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1. Ahab the Arab; 1962
2. Butch Babarian; 1963 {CD exclusive}
3. Funny Man; 1963
4. Harry the Hairy Ape; 1963
5. Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills; 1961
6. My Dad; 1983
7. Santa Claus Is Watching You; 1962 {CD exclusive}
8. Speed Ball; 1963
9. One More Last Chance; 1981 {CD exclusive}
10. Furthermore; 1962
11. Shriner's Convention; 1980

Photobucket Ray returned to Mercury Records in 1983. He recorded one album, Me, and released a few singles. I have no idea as to what caused it but this album was never really promoted or publicized much at all. Perhaps behind-the-scenes chaos or turmoil prevented the album from being properly publicized/promoted? Everyone knows that publicity is a big factor in the advertising of a single or an album...I've gone through the vintage news time-line archives for "Ray Stevens + 1983" and there's no real publicity for the album. The song, "My Dad", comes from that 1983 album and it's on the All-Time Hits collection above. It reached the country chart in 1984...before you can ask, I've already checked the news archive time-line for Ray in 1984 and there's no mention of Me. However, Ray appeared on an episode of Fall Guy and performed "A Piece of Paradise Called Tennessee"...so there was some kind of publicity for the album but nothing conventional. For more information on this album, seek my blog entry about it. The archive blog entries are located to the right of the blog...click on the arrow next to each month and the blog entries will drop down.

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