Showing posts with label nostalgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nostalgia. Show all posts

September 9, 2009

Ray Stevens: Look Back at 8-track...another chapter

The 8-track has a polarizing effect on music buyers. I should say it has that kind of effect on those who experienced the 8-track. You can find places on-line and even at flea markets and yard sales where 8-tracks are in abundance. I'm not into 8-tracks but I know that there's an audience out there that buys them. I buy CD's and vinyl albums...sometimes cassette's...I've never had a nostalgic feeling about the 8-track but given that this is my Ray Stevens blog I thought I'd put up some 8-track images. I've did blog entries before about 8-tracks but in this entry I plan on putting up several images of Ray Stevens 8-tracks. In a lot of instances the 8-track was a good idea and it gave music buyers a new way to listen to music that hadn't been done before. The idea of continuous play without having to flip it over to the other side I think was the main selling factor. The drawback as I touched upon months ago was the continuous play tended to wear out the magnetic tape to the point where other songs could faintly be heard in the background. If an 8-track was severely over-played the tracks would jump and you could be listening to a song and then it would click to another song and then go back.

The image you see above is a music/song book promoting "Sunset Strip", a Top-10 Adult-Contemporary hit for Ray in 1970.

Don't Laugh Now; 1982 RCA 8-track
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As with cassettes, the 8-track was a compact device...a bit more bulky than a cassette...but it was popular with the crowd who didn't want to fool with flipping the record or cassette over and hearing side two. You'd shove the 8-track cartridge into it's player and there you'd have it...whenever you wanted to stop hearing the music you simply yanked the cartridge out of the 8-track player. Today the 8-track is synonymous with the '70s. Quite a few of these images aren't in perfect shape...but the point is to showcase the 8-track.

Feel The Music; 1977 Warner Brothers 8-track

This particular release as you can see didn't feature a picture of Ray on the cover. Ray's image appeared on the back of the album...and I've yet to find out why even though the album title is pretty obvious why his image didn't appear on the front. On this 8-track the song "Junkie For You" was the continued track. In most if not all 8-tracks, there was always one song or two that would have a beginning and then halfway through the song there would be a pause while the track jumped to the next sequence and the second part of the song would play. In albums and cassettes this sort of thing never happened unless a song actually had two parts. When I used to play my grandparent's 8-tracks I'd be singing to myself and then the inevitable break in the song would occur and then you'd hear a click and the second part would continue.

Losin' Streak; 1973 Barnaby Records 8-track

From the looks of this particular 8-track the songs are located on the back label. For those who don't know, the 8-track label would start at the top and run down the front of the cartridge and go up the back of the cartridge to a certain point. On most 8-tracks there were grip marks on the side where a person would place their thumb and one of their other fingers on either side to push or pull out the cartridge. I know that some tossed this kind of procedure to the side and grabbed the tape improperly and would yank the cartridge out. Sometimes, though, the improper removal of the tape from the 8-track player would do more harm than good. As you look down the 8-track you'll see that the label starts to curve around the cartridge. When 8-tracks were carried in stores they would be displayed much like cassettes were: the artist and name of the project would be written across the spine. Well, in books you'd call it the spine...I wouldn't know what you'd call it when referencing cassette or 8-track tape. Vinyl album jackets have a spine, too.

Have a Little Talk With Myself; 1969 Monument 8-track

Looking at this 8-track from 40 years ago I can see that there were no songs that had a break in the performance. In the previous image we see that one song had a (Beg) and a (Contd) which of course stood for beginning and continued. This is the album that featured Ray tackling 9 contemporary pop songs ranging from the Beatles to Blood, Sweat, and Tears. Three songs on the album, "The Little Woman", "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", and the title track "Have a Little Talk With Myself" were original songs. "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" was at the time a brand new song from a songwriter named Kris Kristofferson. Ray was the very first artist to record the song. It became a minor hit for Ray but a huge hit for Johnny Cash the next year. I know rock and pop fans are pretty loyal and fierce when it comes to covers and re-makes...i'm sure rock and pop purists would have headaches or worse if they were to hear Ray's versions of "Help", "Hey Jude", "Aquarius", "Spinning Wheel", and others. The way rock and pop music fans and critics are so irreverent, though, they might have headaches hearing those songs...period...no matter who's singing them. This concludes the 8-track portion of the blog entry...

And now a few words about anti-Ray Stevens commentary surfacing on-line...

Obviously, this is a Ray Stevens blog site...and positive Ray Stevens commentary fills this blog site. I doubt anyone who has problems with Ray, both past or present, ever visits this blog. Chances are, though, the critics of Ray who find this blog site by accident probably have more than they can stomach and exit as soon as possible instead of taking the time to learn about Ray's career down through the years which brings me to this point:

The long silent critics of Ray I've noticed have ratcheted up their rhetoric lately in blogs of their own...no, not in blogs dedicated to Ray but in politically charged blogs. Perhaps I'm becoming even more defensive and on the look-out for negative comments and have just now noticed? I happen to think that it's becoming a trend, though, to evoke Ray's name into arguments by pulling in songs or quotes to back up whatever statements are being made in the blogs.

A lot of it, I think, centers around a few appearances he's made on mainstream cable programs, specifically Hannity and Huckabee. Ever since the re-issue of "If 10% Is Good Enough For Jesus" I'm finding that Ray's name appears in passing or is name-dropped in a number of blogs...but due to the positive response from a number of people in various on-line blogs the critics come out of the woodwork and they feel the need to try and put a damper on things and bring out the old "Ray's not politically correct" label. I tend to think that these critics latch onto a popular misconception and feed it into the brains of most people. I'll bet that most people who call Ray politically incorrect have never really heard anything he's recorded straight through.

I happen to think a lot of people just jump on the bandwagon and see a song called "Ahab the Arab" and instantly say it's politically incorrect. "Shriner's Convention", his 1980 hit, has gotten such a beating during the last several years from people who don't really understand the song and only choose to see it as a mockery of Shriners and these people are ready to argue with anyone who has a positive view of the song. I don't know if it's still uploaded but someone on You Tube uploaded a 1995 music video of the song and there were scores of people roasting the song and accusing Ray of being "sick", "sacrilegious", "politically incorrect", "mean"...there were all kinds of verbal attacks directed at Ray all because of a harmless satirical song about a convention of Shriners and the one-sided phone conversation between the straight-laced Shriner and the one who likes to party. The song is very comical but it gets nothing but contempt from those who think Shriners are above being spoofed...which is how the critics of the song come across sounding.

November 14, 2008

Have a Little Talk...about Ray Stevens!

In a previous blog I mentioned the upcoming 40th anniversary of Ray's Gitarzan single and album. Ray issued another album in 1969 which, too, will turn 40 next year. This album was all-serious and it contained his versions of contemporary pop songs and a couple of new songs. The cover songs include his take on "But You Know I Love You", which was a country hit for Bill Anderson as well as Dolly Parton. The pop version was by The First Edition, which included future country music super-star, Kenny Rogers. The writer was a man named Mike Settle, a member of The First Edition. Some daring covers and I say daring depending on whose reading this...some daring covers include his versions of several major Beatles pop hits. There are those who feel The Beatles can not be covered...some are very protective when it comes to songs. It's now time to understand the era in which Ray Stevens emerged from...his era of singers were open to singing anything as long as something new could be added...which may include something major like a tempo change or something subtle like instrumentation. The Beatles songs that Ray covers on this album are "Hey Jude" and "Help". Ray over-dubs his voice many times to create the background vocals and the choir effect on a lot of these songs. "Hey Jude" in particular. Interestingly, while I had written that Ray likes to play around and dabble with songs, he seemed to keep The Beatles songs in tact...down to the rousing close of "Hey Jude" with all the na-na, na-na, na na na na's that close out the song.

One of the newer songs is "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" which was issued as a single in late 1969. Ray was the first artist to record this song, famously recorded by Johnny Cash a year later in 1970. Ray's version stalled on the pop Hot 100 at #81 in 1969 but it made the country Top 100, reaching the Top-60, his first appearance on the country singles chart. Years later Ray said that his public image couldn't sell the song in the way Johnny Cash did. A listener couldn't imagine clean-cut Ray Stevens on a drinking binge but they could imagine Johnny Cash on a binge. Kris Kristofferson wrote the song. It's said that he wrote this and "Help Me Make It Through The Night" on the same day. Another of the newer songs is "The Little Woman" which Ray himself wrote. This song is about a man who meets a social-climbing woman in a bar and from what we hear she comes on to Ray but he tells her no thanks, he's married.

"Hair" comes from the rock musical...Ray performs all parts of the song and it comes close to being a novelty in his delivery. Ray tells us he wants to give a home to the fleas in his hair...as well as a hive for the bees...a nest for the birds, etc etc. The song originates from a musical depicting the rebellious notion of men letting their hair grow long, which was a symbol of women for years and years while men had shorter hair...but in the mid to late '60s things changed and men started to let their hair grow. The Cowsills recorded "Hair" and had a huge pop hit with it in 1969. Another song from that musical is "Aquarius". Ray performs this song in step with the Fifth Dimension's version that year. Their take was released as a single and became a multi-week #1 hit.

Along the way we hear Ray take on the "Spinning Wheel", a pop hit for Blood, Sweat, and Tears and he covered Bob Dylan's "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight". Another song from John Lennon and Paul McCartney is on this album, "The Fool on the Hill". One of the stand-outs in an album of stand-out songs is his take on Joe South's "Games People Play". Our man Ray was seriously taking on some pretty big names in the rock world for this album.

Aside from "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", the other commercial single was the title track, the self-written "Have a Little Talk With Myself". This song is an introspective song about man's selfishness and arrogance in their quest for fame and glory. Ray sings the song personally...coming across as if he's the one who needs to change his ways and attitude. The single charted country, reaching the Top-70.

Songs are not in order as they appear on the 1969 album...

1. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
2. But You Know I Love You
3. Aquarius
4. Help
5. Hair
6. Spinning Wheel
7. The Little Woman
8. Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down
9. The Fool On The Hill
10. Games People Play
11. Hey Jude
12. Have A Little Talk With Myself

This was the picture sleeve of the title track, issued in France as a single...click for a bigger image...

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