Hello once again!! Did I ever get a surprise earlier today as I visited Ray's video streaming site...it's called raystevens.tv and I've written about it before. It's a premium site. I opened up the section which archives his episodes of the CabaRay Nashville television series and would you believe Season Five is already airing on PBS stations?
The season kicked off two weeks ago on January 6th but there hadn't been any promo videos emerge on YouTube promoting this fact. The local PBS affiliate in my area, KET2, airs his show but they began repeating episodes from Season Three after the New Year's Eve episode aired in late December and so I naturally assumed that once the repeat cycle completed then Season Five episodes would become available for PBS to air. The fifth season, like the previous four, will also contain 13 episodes and the first episode of Season Five features Ray Hildebrand as a special guest. An edited version of episode one guest starring Steve Wariner is slated as episode two of Season Five. The third episode, which aired on some PBS affiliates over this weekend, guest starred Paul Overstreet. Next week's episode (first airing will be January 26th) will guest star the Bluegrass duo, Dailey and Vincent.
The episodes are added to his video streaming site a week after they've aired on PBS. That means this past weekend's episode, airing the weekend of January 20th and guest starring Paul Overstreet, will be uploaded to Ray's video streaming site the weekend of January 26th...and the Daily and Vincent episode will be uploaded to Ray's video streaming site the following weekend in February.
Ray opened the episode singing "Beyond the Sea" and afterward introduced Ray Hildebrand and jokingly made reference to the artist going by the name of Paul. Given that both are named Ray I'm going to refer to the guest by his last name, Hildebrand, who comes out and tells the history of "Paul and Paula" and how it was originally issued on a label in Forth Worth, TX and how the LP was recorded in Nashville. Paula's real name happens to be Jill Jackson but she wasn't part of the show. He tells a whimsical story of being asked to fly from Kansas to California to record just one song at the insistence of Jon Bauman (Bowser from Sha Na Na). Ray mentioned that Shelby Singleton is responsible for picking up distribution rights to "Paul and Paula" and for changing the duo's name from Ray and Jill (which is how it appears on the original single release pressings in Fort Worth) to Paul and Paula. Hildebrand mentions that one of the things he remembers distinctly is hearing Shelby over the loud speaker saying "take 43..." and explains that there must have been something Shelby didn't like in the previous 42 attempts. He jokingly suggests it could have been the fault of Ray being at the studio...but Ray responds in mock egotism by saying it couldn't have been his fault because if he were involved they would've nailed down the song in one or two takes. For a minute I thought the two of them were going to get into a comical war of words recalling those recording sessions in the '60s.
Hildebrand performs "Hey Paula" with Ray's three female harmony singers. They each vie for the role of Paula and throughout the performance each one gently pushes the other out of the way each time it's their turn to sing Jill/Paula's lyrics. After this performance he tells of the time he abruptly left a Dick Clark tour because he couldn't take life on the road anymore. He says he slipped a note underneath the door and left. Dick had to fill in for Hildebrand throughout the remaining tour stops (three in total). Ray suggests that Hildebrand might be the music industry's father of Contemporary Christian music. Hildebrand talks of recording Christian music and Word Records. Ray brings up Hildebrand's past involvement with an organization known as The Fellowship of Christian Athletes. A performance of "Say I Do" by Hildebrand soon follows...but introduced by Ray as "here's Paul...no, Ray...or is it...well, whoever it is...". Upon the conclusion of the song Ray thanks him for being a guest on the show...and this is followed by an instrumental of "Tennessee Waltz" by Ray's band. The lead instrument is the electric guitar played by Jerry Kimbrough.
The show's announcer, Bill Cody, comes running onto the set to see if he could introduce the show's closing number...Ray agrees...and "You're Nobody Til Somebody Loves You" done in Ray Stevens style is delivered as the closing performance. One of the harmony singers frequently offers reaction lines which are greeted with giggles from the audience. It's definitely very different from the crooner version by Dean Martin.
This episode was taped during recording sessions held in 2017 and as I was mentioning in a couple of previous blog entries Season Five will be the final season of episodes taped at the current studio. His next recording sessions are going to take place at the CabaRay and those are going to get underway soon. The next recap I'll post will be this weekend once the Paul Overstreet episode is uploaded to Ray's video streaming site.
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