Showing posts with label Blues Love Affair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blues Love Affair. Show all posts

May 12, 2022

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

Well, hello Ray Stevens fans!! As longtime readers of this fan created blog should be aware of by now I love the recordings Ray did for the Warner Brothers label in the mid to late 1970s. I like all of his songs...but I have a particular love for that era in his recording career. I've often wondered the reason for this...maybe it's because as a child growing up I wasn't as familiar with Ray's songs from that particular record label. It could also stem from, as I've discussed often, the sound of his recordings in this time period. There's a specific sound that you hear on the Ray Stevens Warner Brothers songs that you don't hear before and after he was on the label. Then again it could just be my own ear hearing things unique to that specific time period in his recording career (1976-1979). Well, in 2022, his 1977 album, Feel the Music, reaches 45. The gem stone that represents a 45th anniversary is Sapphire. This gem can come in different colors...I prefer blue. I had thought about typing out this blog entry in blue color but I decided I'd just use that color a few times. The album contains 10 songs...9 of the songs were written by Ray Stevens. There are several music styles heard on this album, too. A bluesy flavor dominates songs like "Blues Love Affair", "Junkie For You", and the title track, "Feel the Music". However, the title track starts out as if it's going to be a bluesy ballad but lyrically it's a motivational number...and the tempo picks up dramatically as the song reaches it's conclusion. All of the songs on the album are sensational, in my opinion. One thing to keep in mind, though, is the sound may be, to some, indicative of 1970s country music. I don't have a strong opinion, either way, with how the sounds in country music have changed throughout the decades but from beginning to end on this album you'll hear certain moments, if you're a student of country music of the late 1970s, where you'll know it's from that time period. 

The Warner Brothers label is the first to market Ray Stevens as a country music artist. If you were look up album reviews or write-up's in music magazines about Ray Stevens from the early to mid 1970s chances were he was being covered by Pop music and Easy-Listening music journalists and critics. When he'd cross-over to country music, frequently, beginning in the early 1970s, the country music section of weekly music magazines would feature reports on his albums and singles, too. As a legitimate cross-over artist he went decidedly country once he joined Warner Brothers in 1976. His second album for the company, Feel the Music, featured a couple of single releases. One of those releases was "Dixie Hummingbird" which reached the Country Top-40 in Record World magazine. In a 12 week run on the Country singles chart in Record World, beginning on June 11, 1977 the single reached it's peak on August 6, 1977 in it's 9th week. Ray Stevens reached the Top-40 with several single releases on the pages of Record World and Cashbox magazine which missed the Top-40 in Billboard magazine. "Dixie Hummingbird" is one of those examples of Ray having a Top-40 hit single in a publication other than Billboard. Another single release from the 1977 album arrived earlier in the year in the form of "Get Crazy With Me". This single reached the various music charts...achieving it's highest chart ranking in Record World where it peaked below the Top-40 on March 26, 1977. It was a single that had a funky sound to it. 


As mentioned the album reaches 45 this year...and in case you're wondering the front of the album is an illustration of a stereo speaker. Ray wants you to quite literally, "Feel the Music". The back of the album features an illustration of the back of a stereo speaker...and a photo of Ray Stevens is placed in a position where you'd normally find the manufacturer's warrantee taped. The illustration is so detailed you'll think you're looking at the back of a real stereo speaker. There's a gospel flavored sing-a-long on here titled "Save Me From Myself" and a slow love ballad called "Daydream Romance". The album reached the Top-50 Country Albums on Billboard and the Top-40 Country Albums on Record World...reaching it's highest peak in Record World in April 1977. If you are interested in hearing some of the songs on this 1977 album you can always look them up on YouTube. Ray has the audio of "Feel the Music" on his YouTube channel and there's also a performance of the song from the Marty Robbins television show on YouTube. If you love "Get Crazy With Me" as much as I do then you're going to love the entire Feel the Music album!! 

The ten songs on this album, not in chronological order, are: Feel the Music; Daydream Romance; Alone With You; Blues Love Affair; Dixie Hummingbird; Set The Children Free; Junkie For You; Road Widow; Get Crazy With Me; and Save Me From Myself.   

July 5, 2021

Ray Stevens sings some of those soothing, mellow ballads...

Earlier in the year I wrote a blog entry about a 1976 Ray Stevens album reaching 45 this year. That album, Just for the Record, is a wonderful collection of songs and it was the first of several studio albums Ray recorded for Warner Brothers. I periodically return to the Ray Stevens recordings of the late 1970s...I just have this attachment to them...it can't be explained beyond my saying that I love those recordings! Maybe I love them because they're over-looked and under-appreciated? Maybe I love the sound of those recordings and perhaps because those records sound so different than what he was doing at Barnaby Records during the first half of the decade and what he would eventually do at RCA Records at the start of the 1980s...because the Warner Brothers sound is so different from what came before and after his years spent there maybe that's why I have this intense love for those songs. See, I told you it's hard to explain my attachment to those songs!!


"You Are So Beautiful" was Ray's debut single for Warner Brothers in 1976...and as you can see from that 1979 television appearance on Pop! Goes the Country he enjoyed performing it for the fans. Ray followed it up with "Honky Tonk Waltz"...a clever song blending country music within the framework of a waltz. The song takes place inside a bar room. There's a video performance of Ray from 1977 singing the song on an episode of  Pop! Goes the Country...but I'm going to embed the audio track...


A lot of the recordings Ray Stevens did for Warner Brothers were spotlighted in 1995 on a set of three CD's: Cornball, Do You Wanna Dance?, and The Serious Side of Ray Stevens. YouTube has the audio tracks from the second two compilation albums but for whatever reason there weren't any official uploads of the songs featured on the Cornball release. Some wonderful recordings from Ray of "Your Cash Ain't Nothin' but Trash", "One Mint Julep", "Cornball", "Once in Awhile", and "Money Honey" are on that compilation. I came across an audio of "Money Honey" just recently but I've not posted it in any blog entry yet. I've been waiting to see if it'll stay online...and so far it's remained on YouTube. Instead of posting a YouTube embed of the audio track I'll post this "Money Honey" LINK

If anyone comes across this blog entry at some future date and they click the link and it takes you to a blank screen then you'll know why I decided not to embed the YouTube screen.  

I thought the title of this blog entry was to focus on Ray Stevens songs that are mellow, smooth, and calm...the songs I've opened the blog entry with are anything but mellow, soothing, or calm...especially the heavy drum beats and all out showmanship heard on "Money Honey". That recording featured only five musicians...in fact, the entire 1978 There is Something On Your Mind album from which "Money Honey" originates, it only featured five musicians total! The musicians heard on "Money Honey" were Ray Stevens (keyboard, synthesizer, percussion), Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar), Reggie Young (electric guitar), Jack Williams (bass), and pounding away on the drums on that recording was Jerry Kroon. This line-up of musicians was also heard in the recording of "Old Faithful Trilogy". The 1978 album has 8 songs...on 6 of those recordings Johnny Christopher played acoustic guitar while Jerry Carrigan played drums. I'm sure the two of them were unavailable the day "Money Honey" and "Old Faithful Trilogy" were recorded.  

Yes, after getting things started with some up-tempo songs we're heading into mellow lane now...take a listen to this soothing ballad from Ray Stevens titled "Two Wrongs Don't Make a Right"...you're gonna love the sound and the way in which Ray sings the lyrics...


Staying with that same 1995 compilation album we have the 1976 inspirational ballad, "One and Only You", from the pen of Buddy Kalb. This is significant...it marked the first time Ray recorded a song written by Buddy Kalb...a writer who would go on to dominate a lot of Ray's albums beginning in the mid to late '80s. 


Ray's Warner Brothers era also contains these ballads: "L'amour", "Blues Love Affair", "Road Widow", "You're Magic", "With a Smile", and "Daydream Romance". Here's a bluesy, mid-tempo offering from Ray titled "Blues Love Affair"...from his 1977 Feel the Music album...


Although I love the recordings Ray Stevens did in the late 1970s and I've shared several in this blog entry...historians/critics only focus on novelty songs when it comes to Ray Stevens...and because of that his Warner Brothers time period is often referenced with two novelty recordings: 1976's chicken clucked "In the Mood", released as The Henhouse Five Plus Too, and 1979's "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow"...and all of the serious recordings he did for the company get ignored time and time again...but yet that's one of the reasons why this blog exists...to spotlight what historians and essayists, alike, choose to ignore. "Daydream Romance"...that one is so mellow you'll feel as if you're off in a dream world...take in the relaxed, tranquil music...this is the perfect audio track to conclude this blog entry with!