One of the aspects of the Ray Stevens CabaRay showroom in West Nashville is the interior design. While the exterior of the showroom is wonderful to look at the interior is obviously much more wonderful to behold. The performance area includes pictorial tributes to various people behind the scenes that were instrumental in the shaping of Nashville as Music City, U.S.A. and while some of the names on the wall are familiar to a general audience there may be some that aren't. The booth's inside the showroom are named for record producers, for example, in addition to their name and imagery on the walls. I'll be including a video embed near the end of this blog entry that takes a brief tour of the CabaRay prior to it's grand opening. In the video you'll notice a white piano sitting on stage. I don't know how long the white piano was in use but in every photo I've seen and when I visited the CabaRay back in March he had the ever popular red piano on stage. The video clip was posted on YouTube on January 9th and the CabaRay had it's grand opening later that month.
This opening paragraph about the CabaRay leads into the overall focus of this blog entry. While I've written frequently about a number of Ray Stevens single releases I felt like writing a blog entry about a particular recording titled "The Old English Surfer". This song, written by Ray, was released as the B-side of a single on Mercury Records in the summer of 1965. The A-side is "Mr. Baker the Undertaker".
The recording was produced by Shelby Singleton and Jerry Kennedy. When you watch the video clip later on in the blog entry you'll see their names along the CabaRay wall. The song can be classified as pure novelty as can it's A-side. This recording came along at a time when Ray's main focus happened to be in the production side of the music industry. Ray had two separate careers going at the same time. He had a recording contract with Mercury Records while he played on sessions and did production work for acts primarily on the Monument Records label but he also produced, arranged, and played on the recording sessions of lesser known acts on a wide variety of labels in the Mercury and Monument family of subsidiary labels. Ray didn't have a recording contract with Monument Records during this time and so any studio recording from Ray that appeared on vinyl was under the control of Mercury Records. This unique scenario of working for two competing record labels ended, though, by late 1965. He became a recording artist for Monument Records, interestingly enough, with his next single release and so "Mr. Baker the Undertaker" / "The Old English Surfer" happened to be the final single release on him, at the moment, from Mercury Records. He returned to Mercury Records later on for a series of single releases and an album but the bulk of his recordings for the label arrived during the 1961-1965 time frame.
"The Old English Surfer" is a song about what you'd think it would be about. The novelty song uses the massive popularity of the surfer craze sweeping pop music but doesn't feature conventional 'surf music' in the background. Instead it features some sound effects of gurgling/bubbling water and an electric guitar contributing surf-type accompaniment. In the song Ray tells the story of an Englishman that works at a beach and how his violin controls the flow of the waves. According to the song the action takes place in the year 1542 and Ray assures the listener that this was well before Jan and Dean made their debut. Aside from that one reference to contemporary pop act, Jan and Dean, the rest of the song centers around the violinist's prowess and Ray's manic vocal delivery. In closing here's the video clip from earlier this year as Ray walks around the performance area of the CabaRay...
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