January 10, 2022

Ray Stevens: Don't Laugh at 40...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! The year 2022 brings with it numerous anniversaries for Ray Stevens. I'll be highlighting some of those milestone anniversaries this year starting with this one...turning 40 is the wonderful 1982 album from Ray Stevens titled Don't Laugh Now. This album was Ray's third studio album for RCA Records. He joined the label in the latter half of 1979 and he remained part of the RCA roster until the second half of 1983 before returning to the Mercury Records label. Ray had previously recorded for Mercury Records during the 1961-1966 time frame.  

In Ray's RCA tenure he recorded three studio albums (1980, 1981, and 1982) and RCA issued a compilation album on him in 1983 prior to his departure from the label. 

Don't Laugh Now, Ray's third studio album with RCA, features 10 recordings. The flow of the album is mostly mid-tempo and up-tempo during the first 5 tracks on Side One of the vinyl album. The only ballad on the first side of the album is "Written Down In My Heart", which was released as a single. Ray performed this song on a couple of television appearances in 1982. On Side Two of album we have mostly slow ballads...the one recording with a somewhat mid-tempo delivery on Side Two is "Country Boy, Country Club Girl". In addition to "Written Down in My Heart" the other single release from the album is the comical "Where the Sun Don't Shine" which is arranged in a traditional Southern Gospel flavor. One of the slower songs on this album is "This Old Piano" but "Why Don't We Go Somewhere and Make Love" is just as slow but the sing-a-long chorus picks up the pace. Ray had never sounded so plaintive than he did while singing "This Old Piano". I consider it an experimental song for him. Ray hardly ever records what are commonly called tearjerker songs and that song could qualify as one. The album's title track takes on the longstanding frustrations most guys go through when it comes to relationships. Men who are upbeat or like to tell jokes, whether they're funny or not, get a reputation as being silly, goofy, immature, and non-serious...and because of that reputation it's a hindrance when it comes to trying to be romantic. When Ray sings the phrase, "Don't Laugh Now", in the context of the song, it's meant to be his way of telling the person "take the things I'm saying to you seriously". 

"Oh, Leo Lady" opens up Side Two and it's a clever song mixing astrology and romance. The song tells of a man who loves a woman in spite of what his horoscope told him. It's a cute love song dealing with hopeless devotion. 


Ray's RCA recordings are not in print. In this era of online music I guess the terminology to use is the music isn't available online. However, long before the internet Ray's recordings for RCA still weren't in abundant supply. The 1983 Greatest Hits album that the label issued contained only two recordings Ray did while at the label and both of those come from 1980. 

In 1985 RCA released a series of albums on everyone that had recorded for the label. The series featured both past and present RCA recording artists. Ray Stevens, being a former RCA recording artist by 1985, was part of this retrospective series and his Collector's Series emerged. RCA released the series on vinyl and in cassette tape format. The art work and design on the vinyl album cover was the same for every recording artist in the series. The compilation features 8 recordings. Collector's Series, to date, remains the only compilation album of Ray's RCA recordings. In 1987 RCA re-issued the title in cassette tape format only...and in that 1987 re-issue they replaced the ballad, "One More Last Chance", with the comedy song "Put It In Your Ear". As you can see "One More Last Chance" is track number 7 on the 1985 Collector's Series. The 1987 re-issue was released in CD format in 1992. Some of the other RCA recordings on that compilation is his biggest single release for the label, "Shriner's Convention". Track 5 is "The Dooright Family"...that comedy song and "Shriner's Convention" are usually the only two recordings to appear on Ray Stevens compilation albums to represent his RCA years. Those two songs come from his debut album for RCA, Shriner's Convention, seen in panel one in the collage above. "You're Never Goin' To Tampa With Me", track 2, is also from his 1980 Shriner's Convention comedy album. The 1985 Collector's Series features 3 tracks from Shriner's Convention, 3 tracks from Don't Laugh Now, and 2 tracks from One More Last Chance

As a long time Ray Stevens fan, and having these two compilations in my personal collection, it had me salivating for more Ray Stevens RCA songs. I didn't start building my vinyl album collection of Ray Stevens until the mid 2000's and so as a teenager and young adult these 8 recordings were the only Ray Stevens RCA songs I was familiar with until I was able to get the actual vinyl albums. "Let's Do It Right This Time" is a great sing-a-long...a love ballad, actually, but it isn't a slow ballad. It's a song that goes hand in hand with the title track of his 1981 album, One More Last Chance. A song of reconciliation and promises of a better future. The 1987 re-issue that you see off to the right features "Put It In Your Ear" as track 8. As mentioned earlier "One More Last Chance" was removed to make room for "Put It In Your Ear". This meant that the year, 1981, was represented on the 1987 Collector's Series with only one song, "Let's Do It Right This Time". Ray had, by 1987, become so popular with a string of comedy albums and had won two consecutive Comedian of the Year trophies at the fan voted Music City News awards that, in hindsight, explains why RCA removed a love ballad for an additional comedy song. In doing so the 1987 Collector's Series features 4 songs from 1980...half of the 1987 album comes from Shriner's Convention

A rarity but it does exist. Don't Laugh Now was available in cassette tape format. In addition to vinyl I also have a cassette tape of the 1982 album. Like stickers on the shrink wrap of vinyl albums that promoted song selections this cassette tape features a trio of songs promoted by RCA: "Such a Night", "Written Down In My Heart", and "Oh, Leo Lady". This promo appears directly on the cassette tape cover. RCA, as you can see, appears in big block letters near the bottom. That big bar code is unusual in that it appears on the front of the cassette tape rather than on the back. However, I have to remind myself that in 1982 vinyl singles and vinyl albums still largely outsold cassette tape...the cassette didn't start to really take off in sales until the middle part of the 1980's and into the 1990's before the CD became dominant. The ten songs on Don't Laugh Now are: "Such a Night", "Written Down in My Heart", "Take That Girl Away", "Always There", "Where the Sun Don't Shine", "Oh, Leo Lady", "Don't Laugh Now", "This Old Piano", "Country Boy, Country Club Girl", and "Why Don't We Go Somewhere and Make Love". When Ray is in concert he usually opens the show with "Such a Night".  

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