The name of this blog entry is inspired by six specific recordings from Ray Stevens that each turn 60 years old this year. The gem celebrated for a 60th anniversary is Diamond and so the Diamond Six are "Chickie Chickie Wah Wah", "Crying Goodbye", "Love Goes on Forever", "Cat Pants", "The Clown", and "School".
Ray recorded those songs for Capitol Records in 1958 following a couple of single releases on their subsidiary label, Prep Records, in 1957. Those curious need not be for I'll provide the song titles of the four from Prep: "Silver Bracelet", "Rang Tang Ding Dong", "Five More Steps", and "Tingle". If you detect a familiar pattern then you're on the right track. Nearly all of those recordings are love ballads and most are presented in the then-current teenage pop sound that could be found on numerous recordings of the era. Even a song titled "Cat Pants" is considered to be a love song...for it also includes female accompaniment excitedly offering remarks directed at the attire. You may also think a song whose title is "Chickie Chickie Wah Wah" has got to be a novelty song, yes? Well, it too, would be considered non-novelty as far as it's presentation and the love song overtone of the lyrics...even though some could argue that it's offbeat title should make it a novelty song.
Those six recordings were released on three separate singles. Each single featured the "A" and "B" side, of course, which total six recordings altogether. After the release of those singles on Capitol Records in 1958 he moved over to the relatively brand new NRC label co-founded by Bill Lowery and issued several more singles during 1959-1960 before moving to the major label, Mercury Records, in 1961. Given all of the love songs that Ray recorded during those early years (1957-1960) you'd think something would've caught on, commercially, but it wasn't to be. His commercial success didn't start until his signing with Mercury Records...but the success wasn't immediate...it took until the summer of 1962 before things really started to heat up...but going back to 1958 we find Ray submerged in the sounds of pop and sometimes rhythm and blues oriented love ballads.
We, as fans, often forget that in 1958 Ray Stevens was just 19 years old! I think we forget this because he's never sounded 'like a kid' on his recordings if that makes sense. Sure his vocals were loose and not as polished or as mature as they'd eventually become but he never sounded like the starry eyed, melodramatic love struck teenager on his records unless a song called for that kind of delivery such as 1963's "It's Party Time". Speaking of age...just recently, on January 24th, Ray reached 79...and speaking of love and romance did you know that Ray's new showroom, CabaRay, is a good place to take your spouse or your boyfriend/girlfriend for Valentine's Day? Ray offers this advice in a recent YouTube clip...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...