Hello all once again...I just finished watching the latest episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. This time around the special guest happened to be Tony Orlando. The episode originally aired for the first time in local PBS syndication last weekend (March 31st).
Ray opens the show performing "I Remember You". He walked out on stage and spoke about the song having been a hit in 1962 by Frank Ifield (I had to look up his name for proper spelling). I had heard the song, in bits and pieces, for years but never knew who sang it. Once I heard Slim Whitman for the first time I mistakenly thought he must have been the singer of that song. The song is from the pen of Johnny Mercer and perhaps it'll be on this Great American Songbook CD that Ray made mention of several months ago in an interview.
Tony is brought out and he speaks about a tour he happened to be on in 1961 which featured Ray and several others. Tony recalls a comical situation in which Ray was getting tired of sleeping on a chair inside the tour bus and, according to Tony, decided to sleep up on the luggage rack. Apparently after several hours of sound sleep the bus had to make a quick stop and Ray slid off the luggage rack to a rather rude awakening. The conversation shifts to current day and Tony credits Ray with all the success he enjoyed in Branson, Missouri. Tony opened his theater, called The Yellow Ribbon Theater, in 1993 and performed there for the rest of the decade. The first song that Tony performed on the show happened to be "Knock Three Times". He made mention that he couldn't call Ray's backup singers The Raelettes or Dawn so maybe he'll refer to this impromptu group as Tony Orlando and Dust. He asks if any of the harmony singers were born when the song was a hit.
A thoroughly engaging performance ensues as Tony has the audience in his hands...giving instructions as to what lyrics come next during the sing-a-long portion.
After the performance of "Knock Three Times" he is asked by Ray to perform his first hit, "Candida". Tony asks if the audience remembers it.
A lot of people forget that Tony had a massively popular recording career throughout the bulk of the '70s. A lot of this is due to the internationally recognizable imagery of his act at that time and a couple of songs which tend to overshadow everything else he did that decade...including a variety show that ran three years (1974-1977).
The enormously successful "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree" is performed next. Tony delivers a brief history of the song and it's impact on his career...stating that he's performed it all over the world at various USO events as well as political events over the decades. This is the song that came to identify the act for decades to come. It hit the top of the charts in eight countries and sold millions upon millions of copies. Of all of the picture sleeves and music books advertising the single I chose the picture sleeve from it's release in Australia to spotlight in this blog entry. I happen to like this one the best out of all the others I'd seen. For this performance Tony engages the audience and harmony singers as he did with "Knock Three Times" earlier. Near the end of the song he pulls Ray into the spotlight to help him finish the song. Ray and Tony take turns trading lyrics with Ray adding sing-a-long harmony vocals with repeats of "tie a yellow ribbon, tie a yellow ribbon". Tony ad-libs a brief portion of the song to acknowledge his appearance on CabaRay Nashville and asks if he can appear at the actual CabaRay showroom when it opens. Ray thanks Tony for appearing and as Tony makes his exit Ray humorously calls him Mr. Shyness.
Ray closes the show with a performance of "In the Still of the Night"...but during this episode Tony Orlando is brought back to finish the song with Ray. The two of them share the spotlight as they trade scat singing phrases such as shoo-wop and shooby-doo. Having made mention of this I should also mention that the song they perform is the pop standard from the '30s and not the pop hit from the late '50s...even though the arrangement of the song by Ray recalls the late '50s pop hit by the time the performance ends. Ray opened and closed the show with his versions of pop standards...so maybe these songs are kind of like sneak previews of this pop standards project that Ray's cryptically referred to, albeit briefly, over the last couple years.
Up next in the series is the episode guest starring Jamie O'Neal. Earlier in the year they had this episode airing the weekend of April 14th but it's actually airing this weekend on local PBS stations. So, if you're keeping track, her appearance is Episode 14 of Season Five. If no PBS stations carry his television series in your area you can subscribe to his video site and watch the episodes on-line. You can visit his video site by clicking HERE. You can either subscribe for half a year or a full year. I subscribed for a full year back in November 2017. If you're a dedicated/serious fan of Ray Stevens you should think about becoming a subscriber.
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