January 1, 2023

Ray Stevens: Hello 2023...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Oh how it feels to write a blog entry on the first day of a brand new year...it feels awesome in that each year begins a clean slate and you have 364 days left until we reach this particular time again. Since we're on January 1, 2023 for several more hours (it's nearing 8pm here) I decided to open the new year with what I call a hodgepodge blog entry where I don't focus on just one point of discussion...I skip around for a few paragraphs and get the new year underway. 

The photo off to the right is one of the earliest appearances by Ray Stevens on a television show with a beard. As you can see, if you look carefully, that the beard isn't necessarily thick or what some would call fully grown...even though you can clearly tell that it's a beard. The facial hair looks more like it's in a week long, or a week and a half long, growth period. When you see different angles of Ray caught on screen caps from this 1972 performance you'll understand more about the thinness of the beard. Ray is singing "Turn Your Radio On", one of his single releases late in 1971. Ray's recordings were in a gospel direction the latter half of 1971 and into much of 1972. They centered around Ray's Turn Your Radio On album. The album itself was released in the first half of 1972 after three singles had already been released: "A Mama and a Papa"; "All My Trials"; and the album's title track, "Turn Your Radio On". All three singles charted Pop which came to a huge surprise to the record company he recorded for at the time, Barnaby Records. In addition to their Pop chart appearance they found success on the adult oriented Adult-Contemporary music format, too. "A Mama and a Papa" and "All My Trials" became Top-10 hits with the adult music format. If those Pop music chart placings for gospel recordings weren't surprising enough "Turn Your Radio On" made it onto the country music chart...reaching the country Top-20 early in 1972...in addition to charting Pop and Adult-Contemporary. It was a Top-10 hit on Canada's country music chart.

Barnaby Records, naturally, followed up those three gospel singles from Ray with his rock-inflected arrangement of "Love Lifted Me". Now, according to sources I've come across over the years, this single reached the music chart of Bangkok. It doesn't get singled out as a hit overseas in Ray's discography but I saw it listed as a hit in Bangkok in several issues of Billboard magazine's Hits of the World. In the September 30, 1972 issue it shows Ray's rendition of "Love Lifted Me" in the Top-5 in Bangkok. I don't know why it's never listed as a hit single but it most certainly was. The single didn't chart anywhere in the United States or Canada...or anywhere else...except for Bangkok. In this period of Ray's career he was heavily active in touring...all over the United States, Canada, and several overseas venues (notably in England). The world travel and constant show dates, as most Ray Stevens fans are aware, led him to write the homesick ballad, "Nashville", which hit midway through 1973 following the severely under-rated Losin' Streak album. "Nashville" was a homesick ballad but it also doubled as a tribute to Music City, U.S.A. and for the last 8 and a half years (2014 - present) it's been something of an anthem for Ray.. it become the name of his wonderful 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville, and it become part of the title of his television series, Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville, which made it's debut in November 2015. In the same time period "Nashville" was turned into a music video as well. The homesick ballad from 1973, which hit the Country Top-40, was suddenly experiencing resurgence within Ray's music journey. Now we're in 2023...and Ray's music journey continues marching on. Like you I'm anticipating a lot of activity from Ray in 2023. He's on hiatus now...until the spring...but I won't be on hiatus.

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