January 26, 2013
Ray Stevens: 9-CD Box Set...1 Year Later...
Good Saturday morning Ray Stevens fans! We're quickly coming up on the 1 year mark for The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. The 9-CD box set was released on February 28, 2012 as an exclusive at Ray's web-store. I don't know if it'll become available on Amazon or any other on-line store as 2013 plays out. I'd be surprised if anyone who stops by this blog fairly frequently is unaware of this project. I wrote about it extensively in the late winter/early spring of 2012 and dedicated 21 blog entries to this 9-CD project and so it should be very familiar to those who visit this blog page as well as those who visit Ray's official web-site. There are still those on the outside of the fan box that more than likely aren't aware that this exists because it's only available at Ray's web-store. By the way, the above image isn't a link. If you click the image it'll only take you to another page where it shows the image by itself. Those who want see the songs that Ray's recorded for the collection and plan on purchasing it you can click this Encyclopedia Link. If you can't afford the collection but really, really want it for your own, save a little money bit by bit and then make the purchase. As I've said several times over the last year, any fan of Ray Stevens should have this in their collection at some point. The songs that Ray recorded are all compiled in alphabetical order which you'll notice right away. The box set also comes with a booklet which features a lot of material about the songs, Ray's commentary on why he picked the material, and statistical data about the original artist's. Some of the classic novelty songs that Ray's recorded specifically for this project are: "Mother-in-Law", "Get a Job", "The King is Gone and So Are You", "The Thing", "May the Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose", "Kansas City Star", "That's What I Like About the South", "The Preacher and the Bear", "Splish Splash", "Love Potion Number Nine", "Witch Doctor", "The Too Fat Polka", "King Tut", and what he considers a modern-day novelty song, the Toby Keith single from a few years ago, "I Wanna Talk About Me". As you can see, some of the novelty classics come from the rhythm and blues genre. Although perhaps not thought of in their original releases as a 'novelty song', the sing-a-long R&B ditties of the '40s and '50s fit well on a collection like this.
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