September 30, 2018

Ray Stevens: Bobby Bare and Friends Podcast...

Hello one and all...it's been awhile, again...but it's better to compose a blog entry that has some meaning rather than just hastily throw one together just to have something available for on-line viewing. As the title of this blog entry details I'll be providing a link to podcast of Ray Stevens being interviewed on Bobby Bare and Friends, a series that airs every other week on WSM radio. Ray's episode is currently the most recent and it originally aired a couple of days ago (September 26th) and it's since been uploaded as a podcast.

The link I'll be providing will have Ray's episode featured on the show's home page given it's the most recent episode but if you click the link in the coming weeks/months you'll have to click the Menu option located on the lower right hand side of the podcast screen. Once you do this you'll see a row of menu options along the top of the podcast...one of those is 'episodes'. Click that and an episode list will drop down and then you'll be able to select the Ray Stevens episode. However, as of this writing, since it's the current episode all you need to do is click HERE and then scroll down to the podcast screen and click the play button.

The theme of the series is the chorus of Bobby's mega-hit, "Detroit City". Bill Cody provides the opening narration/introduction. Bobby opens the show telling of Ray's genius and lists the various Halls of Fame that Ray belongs to but offers the question: "why in the world isn't Ray in the Country Music Hall of Fame??". Ray, in his signature style, says he has no idea why. Bobby says that they [CMA Board] need to get Ray into the Hall of Fame before it's too late...which causes Ray to mention Jerry Reed. They then discuss Jerry Reed and how he should have gotten elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame decades earlier. They then discuss "All-American Boy", the very first hit by Bobby Bare, released under the name of Bill Parsons. Ray had actually brought it up and Bobby told it's history. Although it's Bobby's series there are moments where Ray comes across as the interviewer, too, when he answers Bobby's questions with a counter-question of his own which causes Bobby to recall moments from his career.

The two of them had dramatically different career paths, of course, but each of them share common experiences and professional associations with the likes of Chet Atkins, Shelby Singleton, Felton Jarvis, etc. etc. and each of them played on their fair share of recording sessions for other artists, too. Bobby appeared on Ray's locally syndicated PBS television series, CabaRay Nashville, twice. The first appearance is Episode Three of Season One but a clip from this appearance later shown up on Episode Four of Season Six, an episode titled Hall of Fame. In this exchange Ray and Bobby speak of Chet Atkins and the song "Streets of Baltimore" for which Chet produced while Ray did the arrangement. In the podcast you'll hear Bobby ask Ray how in the world did he ever learn to write the string arrangements and that kind of technical stuff for so many songs.

In the podcast you'll hear Ray reply that when he attended Georgia State he majored in music theory and composition...to which Bobby interjects with a boisterous "ah-ha!!" as if at long last he's learned the secret to Ray's arranging prowess. Ray said that he became interested in musical notes and writing sheet music and that he intended to graduate but the unexpected popularity and success of a certain recording of his in 1961 ["Jeremiah Peabody"] inspired him to not finish his final year and embark on a career in the music business. He tells of getting a job at Mercury Records which he initially wanted to turn down after hearing his salary would only be $50.00 a week. The allure of receiving payment for recording sessions on top of his regular pay caused him to accept the job. Ray later tells of "The Streak" being his biggest selling hit while "Everything is Beautiful" was his biggest hit song in terms of cover versions and accolades.

"The Streak" (released in 1974) sold more than five million copies, hit the top of the Hot 100 for three weeks, the Top-10 on the country music chart, as well as reaching other music charts worldwide. "Everything is Beautiful" (released in 1970), sold over a million copies and it hit the top of the Hot 100 for two weeks as well as the top of the Easy-Listening chart; it became an international hit (reaching the top in Australia and the Top-10 in the United Kingdom) and ultimately it became the most recorded song from the pen of Ray Stevens. It also took home some Grammy honors early in 1971: Ray won for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance while a recording by gospel artist Jake Hess won for Best Inspirational Performance. Ray tells of how the sales of "The Streak" and advance orders were so huge that Barnaby's pressing plant and their distributor couldn't keep up due to it being an Independent label not used to those kinds of order demands.

Bobby mentions Ray's recording of "Harry the Hairy Ape" and this leads into a recollection of a time when Bobby was performing at a venue in Fresno, California and a drunk member of the audience kept hollering for "Detroit City". The story he tells is a classic tale involving a gun toting piano player that performed songs by Ray Stevens and one time he performed "Harry the Hairy Ape" in a gorilla suit. The gun was a prop and it shot blanks. The mention of this comes along within the 6 minute mark of the podcast and you'll hear Bobby's recollection of how they may have scared the drunk guy into future sobriety.

I've only provided an overview of the first 6 or 7 minutes of the half hour podcast. There is a lot more to listen to so don't let my overview take the place of hearing the podcast for yourselves. Here's that link once more: BOBBY BARE INTERVIEWS RAY STEVENS.

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