January 19, 2022

Ray Stevens: "Feel the Music" now Sapphire...

The 45th anniversary is represented by the gemstone, sapphire. So, with the Ray Stevens 1977 album, Feel the Music, reaching 45 this year it's now sapphire. If I were in charge of marketing I'd re-issue the album on sapphire vinyl (the color of sapphire is blue). The album comes from the time period in which Ray recorded for Warner Brothers records. He joined the label in 1976 and stayed there until the mid-point of 1979 before moving on to RCA later in the year. His output on Warner Brothers was eclectic and fun...he did a lot of experimentation with his overall sound while at the label. The Feel the Music album was written almost entirely by Ray Stevens. There are 10 songs on the album and 9 of them were written by Ray...the only song that wasn't happened to be from the pen of Buddy Kalb, "Set The Children Free". You'll hear a wide range of styles on this album and with that wide range of styles you'll hear a wide range of vocalization from Ray, too. The title track features a forceful vocalization...inspirational with a church choir overtone when he reaches the chorus of the song. The harmony singers on this album were: Ray Stevens, Toni Wine, Prissy Reed, and the Mt. Pisgah Young People's Chorus. It's my assumption that "Feel the Music" features the Mt. Pisgah group singing harmony while the remainder of the album features Ray, Toni, and Prissy as the primary harmony vocals. 



If you're a collector of Ray Stevens then you're probably always going to be on the hunt for cassette tapes of his vinyl albums...simply for the sake of adding them to your collection...and when I seen an image of the cassette copy of
Feel the Music I added it to my online image library. It's such a rare item and even more rare to see it with your own eyes. Cassette tapes of 1970's Ray Stevens vinyl albums just aren't in abundance...and the rare moments one comes up for sale on eBay or elsewhere the price is outrageous. I have the vinyl copy of Feel the Music but not the cassette tape. The cover art for the 1977 album is a stereo speaker. On the back of the album there's a photo of Ray and detailed art work of what the back of a stereo speaker looks like. The artist included a lot of detail! Ray's photo is depicted as if it's sticking to the back of the stereo speaker with a couple pieces of tape. So, yes, when I got the vinyl album and added it to my personal collection I looked at the back cover...which is rarely seen online. I sat there for several minutes looking at the art work and the songwriter credits, producer credits, etc. etc. The first single release from the album happened to be the adventurous "Get Crazy With Me". Ray remarked in a print interview in 1977 that he had a lot of fun in the studio while recording the song and made mention of the unusual audio hook found within the music itself. It's a crazy, memorable sound effect unlike anything heard before or since. The single, apparently, was a bit too out of left field because it charted for a total of 4 weeks on the Cashbox country chart...entering March 5, 1977 and exiting at the end of the month on March 26th. 

"Dixie Hummingbird" was the most commercially successful single release from the album. I have yet to see any video footage of Ray singing the song on television, though. The single hit in June of 1977 and reached the Top-30 in the Cashbox Country chart in late July. It flew up the 100 position Cashbox Country chart and was in the Top-30 in it's 7th week. It reached it's peak within the Top-30 the following week on July 30, 1977. Ray performed "Feel the Music" and "Get Crazy With Me" on a couple of television shows of the era but never performed "Dixie Hummingbird". The bluesy "Junkie For You", "Blues Love Affair", and "Road Widow" are a trio of songs that I'd have loved to have seen Ray sing on television. You can also add "Alone With You" to that list. Ray Stevens is always striving to sing, write, arrange, and produce music that is uniquely his own. He has often said that he doesn't concern himself too much, now, if he's the writer or if someone else writes the songs he sings. The main writer of songs for Ray Stevens is Buddy Kalb. In interviews Buddy has remarked that he writes lyrics and a melody but once he turns the lyrics over to Ray then it's turned into a song that sounds as if Ray wrote it. It's a personalization talent that Ray has with the songs that he sings...it's in the vocal delivery, the production, the music arrangements. The track list on the Feel the Music album is below...

1. Feel the Music
2. Daydream Romance
3. Blues Love Affair
4. Alone With You
5. Junkie For You
6. Get Crazy With Me
7. Save Me From Myself
8. Road Widow
9. Set The Children Free
10. Dixie Hummingbird  

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