Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! One of the latest uploads on Ray's YouTube channel is the performance of "There Is No Arizona" by Jamie O'Neal. If you search the archives here you'll find my review of the CabaRay Nashville episode guest starring Jamie O'Neal. I wrote the review in April 2018. Today is the birthday of Jamie O'Neal and so Ray uploaded this performance. Last year on this date he uploaded his interview of her and a performance of "Hey, Good Lookin'". This year, as mentioned, he's uploaded her performance of "There Is No Arizona". Jamie, a singer-songwriter, was among a sea of female country artists that emerged in the latter half of the 1990s and into the 2000s. She came onto the music scene in 2000 on the Mercury label and her first two single releases reached number one. "There Is No Arizona" and "When I Think About Angels" were back-to-back number one hits in 2000 in 2001. The two songs were on an album she released in 2000 called Shiver.
In hindsight the record label released too many songs from the album. There were 5 songs released as singles. In a country music industry where 3 months is the standard for the life of a single (from promotional stage, to impact, to peak, to eventual decline) it means that each single release from that album was potentially being rode for 3 months...15 months total...and the album was released on October 31, 2000. It meant that a follow-up wouldn't arrive until some point in 2002...but an abrupt change in record labels occurred and a recorded follow-up album wasn't released. She went from Mercury to Capitol and after recording one album for that label, Brave, she made her exit...a third album arrived in 2014 called Eternal. She might be the only recording artist whose first three albums contained one word titles.
Here I am again with another fan-created blog entry about Ray Stevens! This time around I'm embedding a video clip of Ray singing a duet with Jamie O'Neal. The two sing a duet of "Hey, Good Lookin", a country music classic from the pen of Hank Williams. Prior to the performance Ray interviews Jamie and she talks about being born in Sydney, Australia but the family moved to America when she was 5. This explains why she has an American accent rather than Australian. Ray brings up how he once worked for Mercury Records in their Artists and Repertoire department...seeking out potential recording artists for the label. The video clip was uploaded back on June 3rd which is her birthday. She was born June 3, 1968. I didn't upload the video then due to the anticipation of the June 4th release of Ray's current novelty song and my subsequent blog entries focusing on it. Now, however, I'm getting around to embedding the video clip.
Hello all...and here's hoping you all took a look at my previous blog entry. In it I embedded a video clip of Ray Stevens from the early 1980s in a commercial for Flav-O-Rich. As I type this it's 10 minutes til 7pm Eastern which means we're a little more than hour away from the Saturday night telecasts of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. The series is locally syndicated on PBS stations across the country but it also airs nationally on cable channel, RFD. The episodes airing on PBS, since they're in local syndication, air at various times based on each individual station's schedule and so there's no definitive air-time. This is why for television programs that are syndicated the phrase "check your local listings" is used.
However, the RFD airing of the series is nationally based and with it comes a definitive time-slot: Saturday nights at 8:30pm Eastern.
In my area a local PBS affiliate, KET, airs Ray's series. It airs on one of their sub-channels, KET2, each Saturday night at 8pm Eastern. So, luckily for me, an episode of his show comes on at 8pm on a local PBS station and then at 8:30pm Eastern the national RFD-TV channel airs an episode. Tonight on KET2 an episode guest starring Jamie O'Neal is airing. In this episode, among the songs performed, is "Open the Door, Richard". That particular song goes back several decades...many decades in fact...it emerged in 1947, originally, and Ray revived it in 2012 for his stellar Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music.
On RFD-TV an episode guest starring Jenny Gill is going to air. In that episode one of the songs performed by Ray is "April in Paris". That particular song hasn't appeared on any studio album from Ray, though. One of the perks of watching Ray's television show is sometimes you'll get to see him perform songs that he hasn't recorded, perform songs that were album cuts and not pushed as single releases, or you'll see him perform songs that he's recorded yet hadn't released yet...and you'll see him, obviously, perform the songs that are closely identified with his career. On top of that you'll also see him perform duets, on occasion, with the special guest of the week. There's a lot of activity packed into each half hour episode...and it's a fast-moving half hour...and that's why some out there have wished the show to expand to an hour.
I don't think expanding to an hour is necessary, though. The half hour format is perfect...it keeps the show tightly scripted, fast moving, and more importantly it leaves a viewer wanting more. I think an hour format would backfire simply based on the type of show CabaRay Nashville happens to be. Would I complain about an hour long version of the show? No! I'd watch it regardless. As mentioned earlier, in my viewing area, two different episodes of the show air back to back on two different networks on Saturday night thanks to the 8pm local PBS airing and the 8:30pm national RFD-TV airing and so for viewers in this area we're getting an hour of Ray Stevens every Saturday night but it isn't an hour-long individual episode...it's two separate half hour episodes on two different channels...and in less than half an hour from now these episodes will air tonight:
Hello to all the fans of Ray Stevens!! Well, I learned earlier this morning when I visited raystevens.tv that there have been some changes in the CabaRay Nashville presentation. For several weeks I've been mentioning that Season Six will mark the debut of episodes taped at the CabaRay Showroom but I found out that a couple of episodes taped during the Season Five sessions at Ray's Music Row location will kick off Season Six.
On the weekend of April 7th the episode guest starring Jamie O'Neal aired on local PBS stations and it was uploaded onto Ray's video site yesterday. That is when I discovered that her episode kicks off Season Six. I should have known because each season has 13 episodes...which meant Tony Orlando's episode was the final episode of Season Five if you're keeping track.
I've updated the episode list I previously posted in a couple of other blog entries to reflect the start of Season Six. I know that Mark Chesnutt's episode aired on local PBS stations this weekend (April 14th) and it'll be uploaded onto Ray's video site next weekend. This will be episode two of Season Six...and then the episodes taped at the CabaRay Showroom should start to air. As of this writing I have no chronological guest list for Season Six. Once a guest list is made available I'll edit this blog entry and fill in the rest of the season's line-up.
Season One: (January - March 2017)
1. Steve Wariner
2. Larry Gatlin
3. Bobby Bare
4. Don Schlitz
5. Charlie McCoy
6. Bobby Braddock
7. Jimmy Fortune
8. Aaron Tippin
9. John Conlee and Jeff Bates
10. Tanya Tucker and T.G. Sheppard
11. Gene Watson
12. James Gregory
13. Billy Dean
Season Two: (April - June 2017)
1. Bobby Goldsboro
2. T. Graham Brown and Suzi Ragsdale
3. Williams and Ree
4. Leroy Van Dyke
5. Bellamy Brothers
6. The Gatlin Brothers
7. Collin Raye
8. Darryl Worley and Lee Greenwood
9. Bill Anderson
10. Sylvia
11. Con Hunley
12. Jimmy Wayne
13. Reed Robertson
Season Three: (July - September 2017)
1. Harold Bradley and Mandy Barnett
2. Shenandoah
3. Michael W. Smith
4. B.J. Thomas
5. Rhonda Vincent
6. Restless Heart
7. John Michael Montgomery
8. Baillie and the Boys
9. Tommy Roe
10. Mark Wills
11. Duane Eddy
12. Angaleena Presley
13. Riders in the Sky
Season Four: (October - December 2017)
1. Rex Allen, Jr.
2. Lari White
3. Charley Pride
4. Janie Fricke (originally aired on RFD)
5. Gary Mule Deer
6. Gary Morris
7. John Berry
8. Jeannie Seely
9. Don McClean
10. Felix Cavaliere
11. Suzy Bogguss (originally aired on RFD)
12. Deborah Allen
13. New Year's Eve Cast Show
Season Five: (January - April 2018)
1. Ray Hildebrand
2. Steve Wariner (edited airing of the series debut episode)
3. Paul Overstreet
4. Daily and Vincent
5. Jenny Gill
6. Tracy Lawrence
7. Sam Moore
8. Wilson Fairchild
9. Deana Carter
10. Gary Puckett
11. John Rich
12. John Rich, Part Two
13. Tony Orlando
Season Six: (April - June 2018)
1. Jamie O'Neal
2. Mark Chesnutt (current episode as of this writing; I'll add the rest of the season's guests once they become available).
And so now...here's my recap of Jamie O'Neal's episode...
Ray opens the show performing his version of "Open the Door, Richard". He had recorded this for The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music but never mentioned this during his brief introduction/backstory about the song. Upon the conclusion of the song Ray mentions his early years in Nashville as a member of the A and R department of Mercury Records. He mentions that the guest on this week's episode also began her career at Mercury Records and by pure coincidence also worked in Mercury's A and R department. The initials stand for Artists and Repertoire...which basically means the person in charge of listening to songs, writing songs, or finding songs that he or she feels best fits a recording artist among a whole host of other functions.
Jamie mentions how much she loves classic/traditional country music and she name drops several legends such as Dolly Parton, Larry Gatlin, and Hank Williams. She mentions her birthplace being Sydney, Australia but at the age of five her family moved to the United States which Ray acknowledged is the reason she doesn't have an Australian accent. Ray brings up Hank Williams being universally recognized as a traditional country music icon and says he'll be performing one of Hank's songs later in the show but suggests that he and Jamie perform a duet rendition of Hank's "Hey, Good Lookin'".
After the duet performance Jamie tells of how she and her family used to do the county fair circuit opening for the headlining acts. Ray asks about her studio, which she said is nicknamed The Grotto, at the suggestion of her husband. She goes into detail about how much she loves the studio life but says that one of her dislikes is the audio mixing...saying she doesn't know how to do it. Ray asks about her record label, Momentum Label Group, of which she speaks about it's formation. He asks her to sing once again and she performs a song she said is brand new and hasn't been released called "Just Whiskey". Afterward she performs her signature hit, "There is No Arizona", a number one country hit for her in 2001.
Ray closes the show singing "Your Cheatin' Heart", the Hank Williams song he hinted at earlier in the show. As previously mentioned Mark Chesnutt was the special guest on this weekend's episode of CabaRay Nashville and once I see it next weekend on Ray's video site I'll write a recap of it. Episode three should take place at the CabaRay Showroom. Some of the guests on Season Six will be Moe Bandy, Mickey Dolenz, Lee Roy Parnell, and CeCe Winans...but as of this writing I don't know when their episodes are going to air.