February 12, 2018

Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville...Jenny Gill

Hello once again!! The episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville that I'm re-capping originally aired on local PBS stations the weekend of February 3rd. It was uploaded onto Ray's premium video site over the weekend. The special guest on this episode happens to be Jenny Gill.

Ray opened the show performing "I Get a Kick out of You". This is a song originally made popular by Frank Sinatra. Ray recorded it for his Sinatra CD, Ray Stevens Sings Sinatra...Say What??. The performance was fun to see...it lacked some of the studio effects found on the recording...but it was a good opening number. He introduces Jenny Gill who speaks of her upbringing and the life of a child having parents in the music industry. Her mother, Janis, is one half of the 1980s duo The Sweethearts of the Rodeo and her father, Vince, is a legendary harmony singer/lead vocalist/Multi-Grammy winner/instrumentalist/songwriter and member of the Country Music Hall of Fame (class of 2007).

She spoke of her husband, how they met, and that playing drums was his main line of work when he entered the music industry but he eventually got into the business side of the industry with Sony/ATV.  Her husband's name is Josh Van Valkenburg. She mentions her EP, The House Sessions, and that she wrote all but one song on the EP.



The first song Jenny sang was "Whenever You Come Around", one of her father's huge hit songs. Ray asks about her next song and she says that it was kind of inspired by her son, Wyatt, even though he wasn't even born or on the radar at the time of it's writing. She said that in hindsight it's a song that's come to define a mother and son dedication and the song's called "Lonely Lost Me". Her third performance was her version of "My Baby Just Wrote me a Letter". Ironically, Ray also performed this song on one of his summer 1970 television programs. The performance of the song from Jenny put me in the mind of Wynonna Judd. When you watch a snippet of the performance in the video clip you, too, may have the same opinion as I did.

Ray closes the show with his version of "April in Paris"...a song that goes way back to the early 1930s...but Ray mentions that people may recall it from the movie, Blazing Saddles, which arrived 42 years after the recording originally hit the pop charts in 1932. I'm hoping this is another of those songs that are to be on an upcoming CD release featuring pop standards that he spoke of several years ago. Only time will tell if and when a CD arrives!

The episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville airing over the weekend guest starred Tracy Lawrence. It'll be uploaded onto Ray's premium video site this coming weekend and once I watch it I'll write my re-cap/review.

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