Showing posts with label Gene Watson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gene Watson. Show all posts

August 6, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-11, S-1

Here it is August 6th and this is my first blog entry of the month!! As I mentioned in a previous blog entry my work hours have changed which doesn't leave me a lot of extra time but I'll squeeze in a blog entry when I get the time. Today we're going to be looking at Episode 11, Season 1 of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. The special guest this time around happens to be classic country music icon Gene Watson. Ray opens the show singing "Power Tools" to a rousing audience. Snippets of the limited animation music video plays along side Ray's performance. The song originated in 1991 and can be found on the album #1 With a Bullet.

Ray brings out Gene Watson and they discuss music; Gene talks about his start in the music industry and how one of Ray's harmony singers once worked for George Jones (Sherri Smith). Gene speaks of touring with George all over the U.S. and Canada. One of the stops Gene made during one of his tours in the 1980's was at Jones Country, the music park George Jones owned for a little more than 6 years in Colmesneil, Texas (1983-1989). 

Gene tells a brief history of "Farewell Party" and how he first heard the song on a Waylon Jennings album. He says that Waylon's recording is way different than his own. The song had also been recorded by Little Jimmy Dickens as an up-tempo sing-a-long. Gene remarked that they recorded "Farewell Party" in one take and within half an hour. Gene's second song is "Fourteen Karat Mind". That particular 1981 single was Gene's only #1 country hit in the United States. He had hit #1 on the country chart in Canada several years earlier with "Paper Rosie", which peaked within the Top-5 in the United States in 1977 but fell short of #1. Gene's breakthrough single arrived in 1975, "Love in the Hot Afternoon". 

Inserted a couple of times throughout the episode is a sketch from Ray's 1991 Amazing Rolling Revue television pilot. It's the sketch of Ray as a captured man insisting that he's oblivious to pain and nothing hurts him...but all it takes is a gentle tap on the face from an empty glove to start Ray divulging plans and revealing the hiding places of the enemy. 


Ray closes the show singing "Mr. Businessman". That song goes back to 1968 and was originally found on the album, Even Stevens. When I saw him in concert he performed this song in all of the concerts I've been to, so far. I've seen him a couple of times in Renfro Valley, Kentucky; once in Nashville, Indiana; and once at the CabaRay in Nashville, Tennessee. Since he doesn't tour anymore I'd have to make a return trip to Nashville, Tennessee in order to see him in concert once again. 

October 18, 2020

Ray Stevens: Gene Watson CabaRay Nashville performance...

Hello once again!! After posting my previous blog entry I noticed that I didn't start off that blog with a greeting of any kind. This past week (October 11th) was the 77th birthday of the legendary country music singer, Gene Watson. If you follow Gene's career you'll know that he still records and before the pandemic came along he was still actively touring all over the country. In his career he's had 48 chart hits between the years 1975 and 1997. He had a little bit of difficulty getting his records on the radio for a brief period of time in the mid 1980s but he managed to rack up additional Top-40 country hits throughout the remainder of the '80s...with occasionally some of them reaching the Top-10...but the bulk of his biggest hits were within a 10 year period, 1975-1985. 

He would have one more Top-10 hit after 1985, "Don't Waste It on The Blues", in 1988. That was his 20th and final Top-10 single. He reached number one just once on the U.S. Billboard Country chart with a single titled "Fourteen Carat Mind" in 1981. He had reached number one for the first time on Canada's Country chart in 1977 with "Paper Rosie", a single that hit the Top-5 here in the U.S. 

The hit that's considered his signature song, "Farewell Party", peaked in the Top-5 in 1979. A lot of people mistakenly think it hit number one. Gene guest starred on the Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville television series and performed two songs. In this video clip it contains Ray interviewing Gene and a performance of "Farewell Party". That song's been recorded by a wide variety of entertainers: Little Jimmy Dickens, Johnny Bush, Waylon Jennings...just to name a few. Gene, if you didn't already know, is a huge fan of the late country music legend, George Jones. One of Ray's background vocalists, Sheri Copeland, shares a past with both George Jones and Gene Watson. In this clip you'll see Sheri and Gene discussing their past and their friendship with George. 

Gene prefers to remain true to the honky-tonk sounds in country music and to remain a traditionalist...some of his solid country recordings in the latter half of the 1980s clashed with the slicker sounds heard on 'New Country' radio stations...which explain why so many of his singles were hitting but yet were peaking in the lower rungs of the chart. If he'd only had airplay support at the time a lot of those singles that peaked outside the Top-10 would've no doubt been strong Top-10 performers and more widely known. The 1990s, however, were a different story for almost everyone in the country music business who had their professional debuts 20 to 30 years earlier. He's become involved with country gospel music in a really big way. He unexpectedly hit number one in the latter half of 2016 with a gospel flavored single from the pen of Larry Gatlin, "Help Me". He hit the top of the Cashbox Christian Country chart. He then issued a CD titled My Gospel Roots in 2017. One of the single releases, "Old Roman Soldier", became another chart topping hit in 2018...reaching number one on the Cashbox Country Christian chart. Cashbox is only available as a digital trade publication. Gene followed that single with another number one hit on Cashbox's Country Christian chart: "Build My Mansion Next Door to Jesus". On receiving the news it's reported that he remarked "I'd never, ever hit number one three times in a row in my entire career!!". Gene became a member of the Grand Ole Opry this year. Now that I've written a lot about Gene Watson...here he is on Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville... 

June 5, 2017

Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville Showroom...

Hello there once again!! Oh yes, I know that I missed nearly an entire month of fan-created blog posting during the month of May but I didn't have much extra time to write a quality entry. I could've posted breezy messages and called it a 'blog entry' but I usually, hardly ever, do that kind of thing unless some kind of urgent news about Ray breaks and I want to get it onto my blog as soon as possible. In my hiatus I'd been busy with my off-line life...my job demands for much of May included working extra days (mandatory) and it created a situation in which my only free time was Saturday evenings and Sunday mornings...hardly any time available to spend seriously concentrating on my blog posts. Before going any further I want to share a video clip that Ray posted in early May of the nearly completed CabaRay Showroom. There are some more things left to complete (the parking lot, for example) but I think the major construction is complete as far as the actual building is concerned.



Meanwhile, during my hiatus from blog writing, several more episodes of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville have aired on KET2. The last blog post I wrote featured a review of episode 7 (Jimmy Fortune guest star).

Episode 8 featured Aaron Tippin as the special guest. On this episode Ray opened the show performing "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone, Part One". After the performance he offers commentary about the physique of special guest, Aaron Tippin. Ray asks about Aaron's past and they discuss some of his duties as a former pilot/aviator. Afterward Aaron gives Ray a bottle of Blackberry Wine. They discuss Aaron's Silver Anniversary in country music. Ray displays a CD celebrating the milestone. Ray remarks about the photo's inside the fold-out and points out a photo of Aaron and Bob Hope during the Gulf War (1991) and this eventually leads into Aaron performing "You've Got to Stand For Something" which became a monster hit in country music during the Gulf War. After a break (fade out) the next scene features Ray introducing Aaron once more for a performance of a brand new song, "God's Not Through with Me Yet". In the Video Jukebox segment the famous music video of "It's Me Again, Margaret" is played. Ray closed the main portion of the show by singing "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone, Part Two".

Sadly episode 9 didn't record. I got an error message on my recording log saying that the channel wasn't available during the taping. It happened to be an odd situation because after contacting the station via social media messaging and asking if the channel had any sort of technical issues Saturday night (May 20th) the very next week (May 27th) episode 10 recorded without any problem. The person that replied to my e-mail couldn't understand the glitch given that, to their knowledge, the station remained on the air the night of May 20th...so it's a mystery as to why the DVR didn't record episode 9 and why the recording log had an error message about the channel not being available. To add to my minor misery over the episode not recording...that particular episode guest starred one of my favorites, John Conlee, and it also featured Jeff Bates. What a night for your DVR to not function properly!!


Episode 10 (May 27th) featured Tanya Tucker and T.G. Sheppard as special guests. Ray opened the show singing "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me". Ray and Tanya perform a cute duet. I do not know the actual name of the song but the line that's often repeated "I Might Be an Old Dog, Honey" is probably the song's title. She then performs "Strong Enough to Bend". T.G. Sheppard performs "I Loved 'Em Everyone" and talks about his current duet project CD. Ironically, Ray and T.G. recorded a duet together called "This One Burger King Town" in 2012 but they didn't perform the song for this particular episode. There's a possibility that he and T.G. performed it during the taping and that it didn't make it into the final cut but that's just me making a guess. Ray and company tape the program in segments and edit everything together later (almost similar in recording technique to "Hee Haw"). Ray closed the main portion of the show by singing "Along Came Jones".

Concurrently, May 27th happened to be the night that Ray made a guest appearance on The Grand Ole Opry. In a segment hosted by Bill Anderson, who advertised the upcoming grand opening of the CabaRay showroom (slated for August), Ray came out to strong applause and after some opening remarks he launched into "It's Me Again, Margaret". In recent times during live performances he cut out his vocal impression of the telephone dial but on that particular night he dazzled the audience (judging by their applause) during his phone dial impression (you can see it on the music video if you're not sure of what I'm referring to). After telling a joke about a hapless kid named Earl and cheating on a school test Ray performed "Misty".

Episode 11, which aired this past Saturday night (June 3rd) featured Gene Watson as the special guest. Ray opened up the show singing "Power Tools" aided by snippets of the music video. Gene Watson is introduced and he talks about his start in the music business. One of Ray's background vocalists, Sheri Copeland Smith, steps into the foreground and shares thoughts about George Jones as does Gene...in particular a tour in Canada that he and George were on. Gene then speaks a little bit about performing at the unidentified Jones Country in the early 1980s. Gene referred to it as "the outdoors music park George owned..." but didn't exactly call it by it's actual name. Gene sang "Farewell Party" and in the Video Jukebox segment the music video of "The Haircut Song" was featured. Gene performs the more uptempo "14 Karat Mind" and then Ray closes the show performing a stellar rendition of "Mr. Businessman".

Take a look at a Billboard advertisement currently on display...