May 20, 2011

Ray Stevens streaks to the Top...

This week in 1974 Ray Stevens hit #1 on the American pop chart with "The Streak". Ray spent a total of 3 non-consecutive weeks at #1. The single hit #1 for 2 consecutive weeks but then dropped from the top spot but returned for a third week. On the charts around the time Ray was at #1 was a single by Paul McCartney called "Band on the Run" which was #1 for 9 non-consecutive weeks. "Billy, Don't Be A Hero" was also among the Top-10 during this time frame. Ray's single ultimately sold more than 5,000,000 copies worldwide and at the end of the year it ranked among the Top-10 hits of 1974. The song reached #1 in England a month later in June 1974 and it reached #1 in Canada and New Zealand. In Australia and Ireland it reached the Top-5...and it became a Top-5 country music hit as well. One of the few radio formats where it didn't make the Top-10 was Adult-Contemporary...and on their weekly chart it reached the Top-15. The song easily became the biggest selling novelty single of the entire decade. It's closest rivals were "Disco Duck" by Rick Dees, "Spiders and Snakes" by Jim Stafford, and "Convoy" by C.W. McCall.

Being that "The Streak" is Ray's biggest commercial hit it's not surprising that it appears on a lot of compilation albums. One of the collections it appears on is this 1983 Greatest Hits collection from RCA Records. Devoted fans of Ray Stevens will be well aware that the shirt that he's wearing was also worn during a television appearance on the Fall Guy. Ray wore the shirt toward the end of the show as he performed "Piece of Paradise Called Tennessee", a song from his 1983 album. That album was titled, Me, and it's never been released in CD format or in Mp3 format. As a result it's only availability is vinyl and cassette. I've got the vinyl album in my collection. "The Streak" continues to be one of the biggest requests at Ray Stevens concerts...and most of the time when he appears on TV or does a radio interview "The Streak" is almost always brought up. The song, by way of You Tube and other on-line sites, continues to get discovered by those who weren't even born when the song was originally released. I was born more than 2 years after "The Streak"...I was born in late 1976...and I discovered the song through my grandparent's who owned a copy of another Greatest Hits release...this time the release was by MCA Records in 1987. The song is so identified with Ray that the 1987 collection placed the song as track one. Typically the song either kicks off the various greatest hits releases or it's track 2 or 3...rarely is the song found further down the track listings. In the 1983 collection it's track 3.

"The Streak" was not confined to only American audiences. The single was an international hit...reaching #1 on several music charts overseas and becoming sales successes overseas, too. This Boogity-Boogity release is what appeared in record stores in Canada, Europe, and Australia. The title of the album is lifted from the phrase heard within the song. The way you can tell the difference between the album that was sold in America and the album that was sold internationally is that the America release didn't contain the comic balloon above Ray's name mentioning that the album features "The Streak" and "The Moonlight Special". The America release features a thought balloon below Ray's name mentioning that the album contains the hit single, "The Streak". Everything else about the album's cover design resembles the America release. Given that the phrase "Woosh!!" appears as a kind of censor bar enabled some people to mistakenly refer to this album as being called "Woosh!!". I suspect people who don't actually own the album assume that's the title...those who own it, as I do, realize the album's really called Boogity-Boogity. The phrase is written down on the lower right in the clouds of dust left by the streaker. The name of the album is also listed on the vinyl album itself...once you take the album out of it's jacket and look at the song list the album's name appears in big bold letters at the top. The album's title is listed on the spine of the jacket, too.

2 comments:

  1. Another annoyance aside from the confusion over the LP name is that lyrics sites sometimes translate boogity boogity from the song to something like "look at that" or "looky at that"

    If I'm not mistaken, Benny & The Jets" was big around this time as well.

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  2. Oh, that's a big annoyance as well. I happened to be on eBay prior to this blog entry and so the mis-titling of the album was what was on my mind the most. I also get annoyed at those who mishear the lyrics as "look at that! look at that!". I'd seen some lyric sites have the lyrics as "looka da, looka da!". I'm surprised that those who've seen the 1992 music video have never inquired why the words "Boogity Boogity" appear in big red letters. They appear, of course, because that's the phrase being heard throughout the song.

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