July 28, 2014

Ray Stevens: Rayality TV webisode 16...

Hello all...I didn't have much time to be on the computer the last couple of days but in keeping with my tradition I've decided to embed the latest installment of Rayality TV from Ray Stevens...



This particular installment features the Reverend Ray character of fictional P.R.A.Y TV spreading the word about animals running wild in a couple of churches. The music videos spotlighted are "Mississippi Squirrel Revival" and "Smoky Mountain Rattlesnake Retreat".

In other happenings...yes, Ray's 2010 music video about illegal immigration, "Come to the U.S.A.", continues to rack up new unique views. It's approaching 8.5 million at the moment. The detailed total is 8,499,273!

For those that missed it or didn't make it there in person, the Country Music Hall of Fame's website has Ray's July 19th appearance at the Ford Theater embedded on their site. You can see the video and interview by clicking HERE. I don't know how long the video will be on-line, though...so watch it while you can. It runs about an hour.

One of the LP's from Ray Stevens that has never, to date, been issued on CD or become available as an Mp3 is 1969's Have a Little Talk with Myself. It's anyone's guess as to the reasons but it's probably due to the fact that most of the songs on it are Ray's versions of then-current pop songs and maybe some sort of music rights/publishing conflict is keeping that particular LP from making it's conversion to the digital age. The songs, with the exception of the title track that Ray penned, haven't become readily available on compilation projects either and so chances are the only place you're going to hear Ray's versions of "Hey Jude", "Aquarius", "Help", and others is to seek out the LP on eBay. Yes, in case you're asking yourselves, there are songs that have been lifted from the LP that have appeared elsewhere: "Hair", "Games People Play", and "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" have appeared on compilation projects released on Ray Stevens...with "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" (Ray's first single to reach the country music charts) being the most readily available of the three. A lot has been made of Ray's version of that particular song. Ray recorded it first and released it in 1969. In spite of the great performance and production it's a case of public image vs. lyrics. Ray had never cultivated the image of being a hell-raiser or one routinely coping with a hangover. The song became enormous a year later in 1970 by Johnny Cash.

This is one of my favorite LP covers. It's an image that I've had in my favorites for years. I've never came across the LP in any flea market...it's often for sale on eBay and other on-line auction sites at a less than reasonable selling price. As you can tell, it's a 2-LP set...20 songs altogether. It became available in 1979 on a label called Imperial House and it's filled with songs from Ray spanning the years of 1968 through 1975...and the one exception being his current hit single at the time, 1979's "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow". The LP collection closes with that recording...the only recording representing his four year stay at Warner Brothers (1976-1979) to make the collection. Apparently the collection's purpose was to spotlight early recordings from Ray and deliberately finish it off with his current hit at the time. If I had been putting the project together I would've closed with his 1968 recording of "Isn't it Lonely Together" and had "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow" as track 18 but I understand the reason for closing the collection with the 1979 hit...and it has a big finish and is perfect to close out a collection, too...but the aching and despair heard in Ray's vocals on the 1968 recording could also work as an LP closer, too.

This television performance, from 1979, is great. It lacks some of the instrumentation used in the studio recording, most notably the horn section, but nonetheless it's still fabulous. You might have to raise your volume...the audio isn't as crisp and sharp as it once was. To mirror this 2-LP collection, I'm closing this blog post with "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow"...


No comments:

Post a Comment

Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...