Showing posts with label novelty songs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label novelty songs. Show all posts

April 18, 2023

Ray Stevens: This album is a gem...a Pearl to be specific...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! The products that were released in 1993 have reached their Pearl anniversary. It's what the 30th anniversary is called and so that's why I title this particular blog entry the way I have. This blog post will focus on the 1993 comedy album, Classic Ray Stevens. It's not necessarily an album review but more of a short synopsis prior to my link to the YouTube playlist.

As mentioned this comedy album from Ray Stevens was released in 1993. This was an incredibly busy year for Ray, but to be more specific, it turned out to be his final season in Branson, Missouri for awhile. He had his theater built down in Branson and open for business by the 1991 tourist season. I don't know off the top of my head if he began construction in the latter half of 1990 or if construction began early in 1991...but I do know his first season of concerts at his theater occurred in 1991. The Branson experience was something phenomenal for Ray. In later interviews when he looked back on that early 1990's run in Branson he said that the very thing that lured a lot of his peers in the music industry to flock to Branson was the very thing that caused him to ultimately decide to leave and return to Nashville on a full-time basis in 1994. Ray remarked that his routine zapped a lot of energy out of him (two concerts a day, six days a week, 6 to 7 months a year). He gave a lot of praise to those that built theaters down there and were still performing or headlining there decades later...but it's something he couldn't keep doing. Branson had a lot of theaters but there weren't a lot, or any, recording studios...there wasn't the ability to jump in the car and be at the recording studio in a moments notice and given Ray's close ties with the backstage element of the music industry one could understand his need to want to get back home to Nashville on a permanent basis...and following the 1993 concert season he put his Branson theater up for sale. There wasn't an immediate buyer but he did lease it to the company that put on the Country Tonite production...and they 'rented' the Ray Stevens Theater for the next 10 years. 

In 1993, while all of that was going on in Branson, Ray released a series of projects. There were two VHS tapes and this Classic Ray Stevens comedy album. The two VHS tapes were Ray Stevens Live! and More Ray Stevens Live!. The latter VHS was sold only at his Branson gift shop and through his fan club. Ray Stevens Live! was sold over television and in print advertisements. Curb Records released Classic Ray Stevens and they would distribute the 1993 VHS tape to retail stores in 1994. The comedy album was brand new despite the album's title. If you weren't much of a fan you'd probably think this was a compilation album given it's title...and believe it or not some 'critics' thought it was a compilation album when they reviewed it. I recall a critic remarking that "there's no Ray Stevens classics on here.. there's no Gitarzan, there's no Streak...a misleading title". However, the album's title is a reference to the cover art...not the track list. On the cover we have a bust of Ray Stevens in a classical music setting. The sheet music, if you have the album and a magnifying glass handy, reads 'Concerto for Cornball'.

The album contains 10 comedy songs...well, 9 comedy songs and a sort of whimsical love ballad titled "Meanwhile". The track list is below:

1. If Ten Percent Is Good Enough for Jesus
2. The Higher Education of Ole Blue
3. The Bricklayer's Song
4. Little League
5. Meanwhile
6. Super Cop
7. If You and Yo' Folks Like Me and My Folks
8. The All-American Two Week Summer Family Vacation
9. The Ballad of Jake McClusky
10. The Motel Song

You can listen to the album on YouTube when you click the playlist link HERE.

February 5, 2023

Ray Stevens: Musicians Hall of Fame Video

Hello fans of Ray Stevens and welcome to February! Well, we're 5 days into the new month but this is my first blog entry of February. We start the month off with a video clip from this past November. As many of you know from reading this fan created blog Ray Stevens was enshrined into the Musicians Hall of Fame in November of 2022. There were several photographs that emerged from the gala, well, the post-ceremony, but until the other day there wasn't anything from the actual presentation. A video clip was played during Ray's induction into the Musicians Hall of Fame and it's narrated by Buddy Kalb. If you're a casual fan of Ray Stevens then a lot of the information and the photos contained in the video clip will be brand new to you. It's a fun video clip featuring Ray at all time periods in his career but with a slight emphasis on the behind the scenes work (record production; music arranging; music publishing; songwriting; playing on sessions). There are numerous photos of Ray inside recording studios up and down Music Row throughout the 1960s. You'll see him in group photos with other session musicians and there are several photos of Ray with some of his closest friends (Chet Atkins and Ralph Emery spring to mind). Ray had previously posted some of the photos that show up in the video clip and there are some that appear in his 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville. So, as I said, if you're a casual fan then a lot of the information Buddy Kalb mentions and most of the photos are going to be brand new to you. Buddy remarks how versatile Ray's song catalog truly is. Ray has recorded pop, country, gospel, and comedy throughout his career. 

The main photo in the YouTube thumbnail is a picture of Ray when he was a kid. In his youth he was raised in several locales in Georgia: Clarkdale (where he was born); Albany (where the family moved to when he was a teen); and then into the outskirts of Atlanta. You're going to love the video clip...

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.

November 21, 2022

Ray Stevens: 1 Day Until Musicians Hall of Fame Induction...

Hello once again and welcome to Part Two...now we're only 1 day away until Ray Stevens is inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame. If you read my Part One blog entry you may have come away with the impression that I was very broad (not detailed) in my overview of Ray's career time-line from 1955 through 1979. I have a detailed career time-line of Ray that runs along the side of the blog. It begins in 1955 and every so often I'll add an image to the time-line which represents a specific year. When Ray releases a new album or single I'll add the publicity image to the time-line. Anyway, I didn't want to be too detailed in my Part One blog since that's the function of the pictorial time-line. Toward the end of the last blog entry I brought up Ray's push into the country music mainstream as the mid 1970's rolled around. His friendship with Chet Atkins lasted decades. The two were often spotted together at music industry functions and gala's...and unless you're well detailed in the career/life of Ray Stevens then you may not know that the two were business partners in a string of real estate properties all over Nashville. In music industry publications some of the writers half-jokingly nicknamed Ray the Landlord of Music Row. Nashville is an album Ray released on Barnaby Records in 1973. I consider it his first major step into the country music format. The album's overall feel is in line with what Nashville was promoting as country music at the time. Ray was the producer and arranger on the album as he had been on his last several studio albums. "Nashville" was the main single release and it's become a mainstay in his concerts...but it had gone under the radar for several decades before Ray brought it back to the forefront of his career several years ago. It was a country music hit...it didn't appear on the pop chart. Ray was in the process of recording studio ownership around this time. He opened up a studio called The Ray Stevens Sound Laboratory. 

Some of his pop music releases crossed over to the country audience and I feel the friendship he had with Ralph Emery was a factor. Ralph was a very influential country music disc jockey and country music television host...and typically if a song was heard on Ralph's broadcasts chances were other disc jockeys around the country picked up on it. 

"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", as mentioned in Part One, was the first single of Ray's to appear on a country music chart. The single charted pop in America and in Canada as well as country in America and Canada. The Canadian RPM publication had Ray's single ranked higher on their pop and country chart's indicating that it either had more sales or more airplay in Canada than here in the United States. If you search weekly chart publications you'll find all kinds of interesting tidbits revolving around single and album releases in Ray's career. Since his career bounced all over the music spectrum you'll find that an album or single might do well in one format but not even appear in another...but then, by the next release, the format that didn't embrace the previous single may embrace the following single and vice versa. Ray's next country appearance came with "Have a Little Talk With Myself"...and though it's appearance on the weekly country chart was brief the fact that his singles were breaking into country music as early as 1969 suggested his wide appeal. 

1970's "Everything is Beautiful" was a multi-week number one pop hit, a multi-week Adult-Contemporary number one, and it reached the music charts internationally...and it, too, crossed over to the country chart and reached the Top-40 in that format. A series of gospel singles in 1971 hit pop and adult-contemporary...with one, "Turn Your Radio On", pulling a triple-prize by charting pop, adult-contemporary, and country. In the country market the single hit the Top-20. Two preceding singles "All My Trials" and "A Mama and a Papa" both reached the Top-10 on the Adult-Contemporary charts both here in the United States and in Canada. His rock and roll arrangement of "Love Lifted Me" was also a hit...but in Bangkok of all places. Billboard magazine's Hits of the World shows the single listed on Bangkok's music chart for multiple weeks. Ray's international publicity took him all over the globe in the early to mid 1970s. As you see here it's a March 1971 issue of a Sydney, Australia tourist guide with Ray Stevens on the cover. Later on Ray wrote the song, "Nashville", a song I mentioned earlier, during one of his lengthy overseas tours. Ray is quoted as saying he wrote the song because he was homesick for Nashville. Ray plays the piano, keyboard, and synthesizer and is credited as one of the musicians in almost all of his albums. He is also credited with being the record producer and music arranger. His first producer credit, as far as his own recordings are concerned, come along in 1968. Specifically it was a co-producer credit with Fred Foster on the Even Stevens album. That is the album that introduced a general public that never bothered to play the B-side of singles a chance to hear a serious side of Ray Stevens. Serious songs often appeared as the B-side of his novelty songs throughout his years at Mercury and during the earliest years of his recording career on Monument (which began in 1965) but Even Stevens was an entire album of non-comedy and it's main single was the pop hit, "Mr. Businessman". Fred Foster, Ray Stevens, and Jim Malloy were the record producers on the Gitarzan comedy album. Ray's final studio album for Monument, Have a Little Talk With Myself, was produced by Ray with co-production by Jim Malloy. Ray's first studio album where he was the sole record producer happened to be Everything is Beautiful, released in the summer of 1970. The Mercury singles and two studio albums (1961-1965) were produced by Shelby Singleton...with some single releases featuring co-production by Jerry Kennedy. 

From 1970 onward Ray has been the main producer of all of his albums and the music arranger on all of his recordings...with the exception of two back to back albums in 1982 and 1983. Don't Laugh Now, from 1982 on RCA Records, featured co-production work from Bob Montgomery. Me, from 1983 on Mercury Records, featured co-production work from Jerry Kennedy. The 1982 album was Ray's third for RCA. A few years earlier, in 1980, Ray was the recipient of two career recognition awards. The Georgia Music Hall of Fame as well as the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Ray's exquisite Don't Laugh Now is so good...there's a mix of all kinds of styles on the album. The opening track is his catchy take on "Such a Night". The album features a novelty song in "Where The Sun Don't Shine" and a series of love ballads including the hit single, "Written Down in My Heart". 


Ray's deep dive into country music comedy began in the latter half of 1984 when he joined MCA Records. It was on this record label where Ray's albums took center stage as each of his releases on the label entered the Country Albums chart...with two of the albums reaching Top-10 status and almost all of them having long chart runs. It is also on MCA Records that the sales of his albums were so large that several of them eventually achieved Gold and Platinum certification. As unbelievable as it may sound Ray's 1981, 1982, and 1983 studio albums didn't appear on the weekly album charts. So, when 1984's He Thinks He's Ray Stevens debuted on Billboard's Country Albums chart it marked his first appearance on the chart with a studio album since Shriner's Convention in 1980. A 1983 Greatest Hits album, on RCA, became a hit. 

Ray's career branched out into different avenues in the 1990s. The decade of the 1980s was dominated, mostly, with his comedy albums for MCA and his consecutive wins as Comedian of the Year by the readers of Music City News magazine and viewers of The Nashville Network. In the 1990s he signed with Curb Records and he revealed his plans for building a theater in Branson, Missouri. The theater opened to the public in the summer of 1991. This led Ray into the realm of VHS tape. He produced and starred in a collection of music videos and sold them on VHS under the title Comedy Video Classics in 1992. VHS reporters for the music industry cited Ray's VHS as being revolutionary. Television commercials played on hundreds of television stations and at all hours of the day and night. It became a multi-million seller through direct marketing and when it was released to retail stores in 1993 it repeated the same success. Billboard named the VHS it's Video of the Year in 1993. Ray Stevens Live!, part of a concert at his former theater in Branson, Missouri, was sold on VHS and was certified Double-Platinum through direct marketing. In audio that decade Ray recorded three studio albums for Curb Records. He performed at his Branson theater for three seasons (1991, 1992, and 1993). Here's video of Ray at the piano performing "Yakety Sax/Yakety Axe" along side Chet Atkins and Boots Randolph. It's from an episode of Nashville Now...you'll see the show's host, Ralph Emery, at the beginning of the video.


Ray returned to MCA Records late in 1996 and recorded two albums for them and released more comedy music videos. He had marked his return to MCA with the retail release of his VHS tape, Get Serious!, which was sold through direct marketing in 1995. It was certified Double-Platinum. 

When Ray goes into the Musicians Hall of Fame tomorrow we'll all be excited but we also know that Ray's career will continue to move along. He'll continue performing concerts at his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville and his songs will continue to be discovered by thousands of people who search the internet for 'comedy songs', 'comedy music', 'funny songs', etc. I deliberately cut off my overview of Ray's career in the mid 1990s because I feel I've written a detailed overview without it turning into an entire career retrospective. I'm hoping the Musicians Hall of Fame will give Ray's career an in-depth going over tomorrow...but even if they don't it's still going to be exciting to know that Ray's being recognized for his career by such a prestigious organization.   

November 20, 2022

Ray Stevens: 2 Days until Musicians Hall of Fame Induction...

Hello once again!! I was going to write a blog entry tomorrow about Ray Stevens being inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame this coming Tuesday (November 22) but I decided to go ahead and write my celebration blog entry today. Why? Well, I can't help myself...I can't wait until tomorrow evening or late in the night tomorrow...I want to mark the celebration now. This will be Part One, however. I'll write Part Two later tonight or sometime early tomorrow morning. 

A general public most likely know of Ray Stevens by way of any number of comedy recordings. Ray himself likes to say that if anybody knows who he is then more than likely they know of him for some kind of comedy song or some sort of comedy video...now, of course, comedy isn't all there is to Ray Stevens. Throughout his now 65 year recording career (dating back to 1957) Ray has recorded just about every type and style of popular music imaginable. He began singing the style of music that was most dominant...the teenage love ballad. His roots are in Georgia. He was born Harold Ray Ragsdale in Clarkdale, Georgia and he resided in Georgia until a permanent move, five years into his recording career, to Nashville, Tennessee in 1962. Late in his high school years he and his family (his parents and a brother) packed up and moved to the Atlanta area. He and his brother had to switch schools, too. Ray had been attending Albany High School but the move from Clarkdale to the Atlanta suburbs meant he was going to graduate from Druid Hills High School. It was in high school that Ray formed a band called The Barons. Prior to the move to Atlanta, as you can see from the photo, Ray had made a name for himself as co-host of a local radio sock hop. This radio series, co-hosted by Mary Dale Vansant, aired on WGPC radio beginning in 1955. It was a Saturday radio program called The Record Hop. As you may have known or may have guessed by now the style of music that a young Ray Stevens (known as Ray Ragsdale) was originally exposed to was country, gospel, and all kinds of rhythm and blues. In addition he was also exposed to radio comedy/stand-up comedy, rock and roll, and with this love of music and comedy he'd say, decades later, was a big reason he loved The Coasters so much. Ray had come of age right when rock and roll was brand new...turning 18 in January 1957. He was a high school graduate the same year...a member of the Druid Hills Class of '57. Yes...it was the very same year he signed his first professional recording contract. It was with Prep Records, a subsidiary of Capitol Records. As far as the music business/music industry is concerned the first two important figures in the career of a young Ray Stevens were Bill Lowery and Ken Nelson. 

Ray had been using his birthname up until his meeting with Ken Nelson. Ray been known as Ray Ragsdale, locally, in the Albany and Atlanta area but it was through the suggestion of Ken Nelson that Ray should come up with a stage name. Harold Ragsdale perhaps sounded too mature of a name for a teenager and the last name, Ragsdale, didn't seem like it could be marketable. Ray decided to use the last name of his mother, Stephens, for his stage name. In interviews Ray remarked that Ken loved the name, 'Ray Stephens', but he says Ken suggested that the last name be spelled 'Stevens'. Prep Records released "Silver Bracelet" under the name of Ray Stevens in 1957...and it was reportedly a local hit in the Atlanta area. Ken released a few singles on Ray on the Capitol label in 1958 that attracted regional attention. Bill Lowery guided Ray through the next phase of his career...signing him to his own label, NRC. Ray, Jerry Reed, Joe South, Tommy Roe, and Billy Joe Royal were all under the guidance of Bill Lowery...most of them, if not all, shown up on The Georgia Jubilee music program. Bill was an Atlanta-based disc jockey who became a very successful music publisher and was completely independent from New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Nashville. One wonders if Ray got his desires of being a publisher from seeing the financial successes of Bill Lowery's music publishing company and how important publishing rights are to a recording? Perhaps...but Ray didn't begin to delve into the music publishing side of the music industry until the late 1960s.


Ray happens to be, in my opinion, a music prodigy. He can play the piano and other keyboard instruments but he can also read and write music for other instruments...and this talent had him in demand for all kinds of recording sessions once he got into Nashville in the early 1960s. In the meantime, though, he professionally parted ways with Bill Lowery and began a professional relationship with Shelby Singleton at Mercury Records in 1961. It was at Mercury where Ray began a lengthy run as a session musician and music arranger...not only on his own recordings but for dozens of other recordings by other recording artists. 

Ray had released a series of love ballads and rhythm and blues style songs in the late 1950s time period. He had also recorded some novlety songs... "Rang Dang Ding Dong" appeared on one side of his debut single in 1957 on Prep, "Silver Bracelet". In 1960, while at NRC, he recorded "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" which displayed not only his love for The Coasters style of music but it was gaining some exposure outside of the Atlanta, Georgia market. Ironically, the reporting of the novelty song's local success made it's way to the owners of the Sgt. Preston character...their lawyers sent NRC a letter and threatened a lawsuit if the song wasn't pulled off the market. Ray has always said that the near hit of that song inspired him to come up with another comedy recording and so, in 1961, he put out a novelty song on Mercury Records. The song is funny but what caused the most attention was it's title: "Jeremiah Peabody's Polyunsaturated Quick Dissolving Fast Acting Pleasant Tasting Green and Purple Pills". This novelty song became Ray's first hit single...reaching the national Hot 100 chart in Billboard magazine. A year earlier "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" peaked on Billboard's Bubbling Under the Hot 100...and had it not been pulled off the market it could've become Ray's first hit. It was on Mercury Records, in 1962, that Ray had his biggest hit single to date...the comical "Ahab the Arab". It crossed over to the Rhythm and Blues chart as well. 

Ray's musician side bigger emphasis during his Mercury (1961-1963) and, specifically, his Monument (1963-1970) years. Fred Foster became the next important figure in Ray's music career in 1963. Fred hired Ray to work in the Artist and Repertoire department, arrange the music for recording sessions, lead the sessions, and play on the sessions. So it is definitely no surprise that it was during the first half of the Monument era where Ray concentrated heavily on music arranging and session work. Mercury Records, however, continued to control his recordings and they released a series of love ballads and novelty songs on him while he was producing and arranging the songs of an assortment of recording artists. Ray either played on the sessions or did the music arranging on several Monument Records releases. He was also getting into the publishing business, too. Lowery Music had been the publishing company that controlled the bulk of Ray's recordings but this changed not too long after Ray joined Monument Records. Ray began his own Ahab Music Company and entered the music publishing business. Now, of course, nearly all of the titles published by his own company were his own recordings...or, later, songs written by writers who worked for his publishing company. While at Mercury Records and at Monument Records he worked with Dolly Parton, Patti Page, Brenda Lee, Dusty Springfield, and Brook Benton. 

Monument began releasing singles on Ray in the latter half of 1965...and though all of the single releases were top quality and excellent their first big hit didn't arrive until 1968's "Mr. Businessman". The single that preceded it, "Unwind", reached the pop Hot 100. From 1968 to around 1984 Ray Stevens continued to balance his recordings between pop, country, and comedy...even recording a gospel album in 1972. He became associated with Andy Williams in 1969. Ray's recording of "Gitarzan" became a million selling hit not only in America but it became a hit in several other countries which opened his career up, a little bit, internationally. He slowed down on participating in recording sessions in 1970 because, in his own words, his career become so successful that he didn't have the time to play on the recordings of other singers as the demands from his own career had skyrocketed tremendously since his move to Nashville in 1962. Andy Williams brought Ray to Barnaby Records in 1970. It was also in 1970 that he hosted a summer show for Andy Williams and that show's theme song, "Everything is Beautiful", went on to win Ray a Grammy in 1971 in the category of Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. A recording of the song by gospel singer, Jake Hess, won a Grammy in a gospel category in 1971. While 1969's "Gitarzan" brought Ray some international recognition it was "Everything is Beautiful" that brought him the widest international exposure to date...selling millions of copies...but the international reach would reach a fever pitch in 1974 with the release of the multi-million selling novelty, "The Streak". 


Ray's songs were bouncing from pop to country to adult-contemporary during the first five years of the '70s. His first appearance on the country music chart had arrived in 1969 with his version of "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down". Ray began marketing himself more and more country by the mid 1970s. Chet Atkins and Ralph Emery were two key figures in Ray's career once the country direction of his career began to take shape. Ray had charted country in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974 with specific single releases and he was a frequent guest on country music programming but it wasn't until 1975 when Ray's single releases began performing even more successfully with country audiences. "Misty", arranged in a Bluegrass style, won Ray a Grammy for Best Arrangement. Ray charted several more country hits as the 1970's ended: "Indian Love Call", "Young Love", "You Are So Beautiful", "Honky Tonk Waltz", "In the Mood", "Dixie Hummingbird", "Get Crazy With Me", and "Be Your Own Best Friend". On regional television commercials Ray was the spokesman for Flav-O-Rich dairy products. I added that tidbit to reinforce the country direction in Ray's career. In 1979 he charted pop for the final time with the novelty "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow". 

This brings to an end Part One. I'll write Part Two in a couple of hours! 

November 6, 2022

Ray Stevens: Have You Heard the New Songs?

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! I had it planned to tape the RFD television show, Larry's Country Diner, last night when my DVR malfunctioned. I got home from work last night and immediately flipped on the TV and went to my DVR menu and seen that the episode I scheduled to have recorded didn't record! I was furious because I was expecting to see the episode when I arrived home from work...and it wasn't recorded. I later discovered that my TV hadn't been updated...we get periodic software update reminders...and obviously I had forgotten to update the software the last time I was watching TV and so I scheduled the DVR to record and it confirmed the episode would record but yet, as mentioned, it didn't. I frantically searched online for any sort of content from the show. 

Now, a few days ago, someone on YouTube uploaded a performance of Ray from Larry's Country Diner. The episode, which originally aired Thursday night was reran Saturday night...it's the Saturday night rerun I attempted to record. Anyway, video of Ray singing "When Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene" emerged on YouTube the other day. The performance comes from someone's TV set...they recorded the song on their cell phone and then uploaded the video to YouTube. I don't prefer to embed video content from those outside of Ray's official YouTube channel but I have posted links to video content from YouTuber members. That's a screen cap from the episode. The TV show is set on a brightly lit stage and so I toned down some of the bright coloring just a little bit. If I wouldn't have then the photo off to the right would look more bright than it currently is. This is during the performance of "When Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene". There are several moments in the performance where Ray gives us some of his familiar facial expressions...particularly when he sings about the athlete who says he's a girl just because he said he is...with obvious visual facts saying otherwise. I don't know if this is the first song about this subject matter but if Ray puts this out through his own social media platforms it, I think, would generate all kinds of notice.  

Those interested, and I'm quite sure all of you are, here is the LINK to watch Ray Stevens perform "When Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene". Since it's a video recorded directly onto a phone from a television set you're not going to have sharp, pristine sound quality...but have the volume up nonetheless and, more importantly, have a listen. 

I hope Ray puts this song out as a single...perhaps with a green screen music video. As mentioned, if Ray would put this song out through his own social media, it would grab a whole lot more attention, shares, likes, and general conversation. It's a light-hearted look at what some people out there want everybody to take extremely seriously. It's a social commentary that speaks to the average person who doesn't let themselves get caught up in a lot of the noise out there or allow 'experts' to tell them how to form their views. 

A fellow Ray Stevens fan who seen the episode was able to record a few seconds of Ray singing a song that we think is called "Cupholder". Also performed was "Where Are All the 12 Year Olds" which I'm more familiar with since he performed it on an episode of Huckabee earlier this year and it's been on YouTube for more than half a year. 

November 4, 2022

Ray Stevens: The Encyclopedia on YouTube...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! I may have mentioned this earlier this year but 2022, hard to believe, marks the 10th anniversary of the Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. Ray released this 9-CD box set in 2012 and it's chock full of his versions of novelty songs of the last 60+ years. He also re-recorded some of his own comedy songs but the majority of the recordings on here are Ray's take on other novelty songs like "Mother-in-Law", "King Tut", "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport", "Little Brown Jug", "Huggin' and Chalkin'", and many, many, more. I don't know if it's because 2022 is the 10th anniversary but Curb Records has uploaded dozens of songs from the Encyclopedia onto YouTube. This is a big deal because, until now, the only way to hear a large amount of Ray's phenomenal recordings of classic novelty songs was to have the 9-CD box set. In 2012 Ray promoted the collection in a series of TV appearances and he made a few online advertisements. I wrote numerous blog entries in 2012 promoting the box set, too. The collection remains a masterpiece and a salute to the novelty song. If you have this box set then you're already familiar with the songs and the booklet. In the booklet you'll read Ray's commentary on all of the songs he recorded for the Encyclopedia plus a lot of facts surrounding the times and places each song made it's impact. Don Cusic was also one of Ray's collaborators. When you watch some episodes of Ray's CabaRay Nashville television show you'll see segments featuring Don Cusic introducing facts surrounding the box set. On the show Don is wearing a graduate uniform and is known as Professor Cusic. Here are a few of the songs Curb Records uploaded from the Encyclopedia onto YouTube...

"Searchin'" is just one of several recordings originated or popularized by The Coasters. I'm excited to finally promote individual audio tracks from the Encyclopedia so you all can hear how great they are. In "Searchin'", Ray is at his Coasters best...several times inserting throaty vocalizations which were like a hallmark of their overall sound. Here we go...


Now, wasn't that fabulous??? It's like Ray is in another world whenever he's covering songs originated by The Coasters or any other rhythm and blues vocal group. If you're familiar with the song, "Cigareets and Whuskey and Wild, Wild Women", then you'll love Ray's rendition of it. It was popularized, originally, by Red Ingle and I've also heard a recording of it by Buck Owens. Now, speaking of Buck, this Ray Stevens rendition will have you thinking of Hee Haw...


 Now, this one is just plain fun...his take on "Mother-in-Law"... 


Most remember Nervous Norvous from the many plays he got on the novelty song broadcasts of Doctor Demento...a song by the name of "Transfusion". A novelty song about a guy that can't get enough blood transfusions and we're left to wonder if the guy gets into car wrecks on purpose just to get another shot of the red stuff. I hope you love hearing these audio tracks from Ray's 2012 Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. There is so much more to hear over on YouTube. Do a search for Ray Stevens + Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music on YouTube and the results will showcase what Curb Records uploaded. Here's Ray's version of "Transfusion"...

October 30, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-10, S-2

Hello one and all...we've made it to Episode 10, Season 2 of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. In this episode the special guest is Sylvia. If you're not very familiar with country music from the 1980s then you're probably not very familiar with Sylvia. She had numerous pop-tinged country hits throughout the 1980s. Her name is Sylvia Hutton but she went by Sylvia...the only country music artist, that I can think of, that deliberately marketed herself with only a first name. 

Ray opens the show singing "Love Potion Number Nine", a song that he recorded for his 2012 box set The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. It was a rousing performance like practically all of his performances are...but this one is especially rousing and I like to think it's due to the song's rhythm and blues origins. Ray grew up loving all kinds of music...particularly early rhythm and blues songs by vocal groups that largely went under the radar on pop radio but were treated like royalty on rhythm and blues radio stations throughout the South. I'm sure Ray first heard "Love Potion Number Nine" by The Clovers, a group he sometimes cites as a favorite of his. Their recording hit in 1959...and you may ask yourselves "wasn't Ray already in the music business in 1959??". Well, yes...but just because you're in the music business it doesn't mean you become an ostrich. Several years later another group, The Searchers, recorded a version of the song and their rendition in 1964 became the bigger pop hit. Mike Stoller and Jerry Leiber wrote the song and they're well known as being the writers for a majority of novelty songs by The Coasters as well.

Ray introduces Sylvia by saying that her family was so poor they couldn't afford to give her a last name. She speaks of her entrance into the music industry. She was born in Indiana and moved to Nashville...she worked in a music publishing company for several years. Ray mentioned that she was a former model...and she laughed and said it was a super short-lived career in that she only had one modeling session. She posed for an advertisement for "You're My Jamaica" when Ray's brother, John Ragsdale, released his recording of the song. Charley Pride would later record the song and have a gigantic hit with it. Sylvia sings "Nobody", her signature song.


Ray plays the sketch that he and Sylvia did together in 1991, "Making Cookies". The song is a spoof of the song, "Making Whoopie". The sketch is part of a VHS from 1992 that Ray released called Amazing Rolling Revue. It was a pilot for an unsold television series. The series would take place on a tour bus, as it's moving down the highway, and feature performances from Ray and insertions of comedy sketches. The concept was apparently way too unconventional for television and so only the pilot episode exists. Ironically, though, decades later he would revisit the concept with the sketch filled Rayality TV series. It had several runs both online and on cable television. 

Sylvia's second song of the episode is titled "Right Turn". In the 1980's she racked up dozens of hit songs...most of them reached the Top-10. It's reported that she also sold nearly 5 million albums. She was a labelmate of Ray Stevens in the early 1980s as both were on RCA at the time. Ray closes the show singing "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills". 

July 31, 2022

Ray Stevens: Upcoming August CabaRay concerts...

It's me once again!! We're here on the final day of July and that means another month of concerts at the Ray Stevens CabaRay showroom has concluded. The last show of the month took place yesterday evening. An online friend of mine attended the concert last night and she shared some photos of her time there. I took notice of some additional trophies in Ray's display case that weren't there back in 2018 when I attended a concert there. The most notable addition is his replica Country Music Hall of Fame plaque, identical to the one that hangs inside the Country Music Hall of Fame building in downtown Nashville. Ray also has his golden medallion on display. These medallions are worn each successive year by members of the Country Music Hall of Fame when they attend each successive election ceremony. As the ceremony in Cooperstown, New York at the National Baseball Hall of Fame features Hall of Fame members in attendance to welcome in the newest inductee's the same thing happens in Nashville during the Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony. Now, as far as the CabaRay concerts go, Ray is going to appear 5 times during the month of August: 6th, 13th, 18th, 20th, and 27th. As you can see there's a 5th concert next month...indicating a Thursday night concert on August 18th. Now, keep in mind, you can also visit the CabaRay on Friday evenings. Ray won't be there but his piano bar is open and the pianist, John Jonethis, will be there for several hours. On the day of concerts John Jonethis plays in the piano bar before and after Ray's concerts and during the intermission period. The goal is to keep the experience up-beat and music heavy...so, no matter where you are within the CabaRay, you're going to hear John's piano playing and his banter whether you're literally inside the piano bar or not. Those interested in attending a concert can click this LINK

Meanwhile, have you purchased your 4-CD Iconic Songs of the 20th Century box set? It's been available for a little more than a year. It's a box set of 4 individual Ray Stevens albums: Great Country Ballads, Melancholy Fescue, Slow Dance, and Nouveau Retro. They're all great...chock full of non-comical Ray Stevens recordings.


Those certain fans that often say that they prefer the 'serious' songs of Ray Stevens much more than the comical ones, well, this 4-CD box set is an answer to your wishes. A fan such as myself I appreciate everything Ray Stevens has recorded but I've read a lot of internet commentary over the years and there's always those that point out that the serious songs are their preference. If you didn't know this 4-CD was available, now you do, and here's the product page to order it. If you want to purchase each individual album and not the entire 4-CD box set you can visit Amazon or other online music sites and search for each album individually. That's why I listed the name of each CD individually. They're also on streaming music sites, too. As I pointed out in a couple of blogs recently Ray Stevens has an online presence. You can find his music just as easily online as you can other recording artists, too. There's this mentality out there from some people, and I've seen it on some of the social media sites, and it's this mentality that Ray's music isn't readily available for "download" or "streaming" but yet it most certainly is available on contemporary music formats. In other words, Ray's music isn't restricted to vinyl or cassette tape as some people, believe it or not, think it is. I know it sounds like an insurmountable task but one of my recent goals is to educate people into realizing that Ray's music is also available for their I-phones and other listening devices, etc. 

When you visit the CabaRay showroom there's a gift shop...and you can purchase the 4-CD box set and I also think each CD is available to purchase individually as well. There's several new items available, too. As a reminder, Ray Stevens will be in concert at the CabaRay five times during the month of August!! Don't forget to scroll up above the photo and click the link for specifics. 

July 25, 2022

Ray Stevens: Hooks, Bait, and Streams...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! If you've taken notice I've been writing blog entries lately that center around the online presence of Ray Stevens. I'm not intentionally going by any kind of pattern...it just seems that way. I hadn't been promoting all of the various online ways you can hear the songs of Ray Stevens during the years that I've been writing fan created blog entries. Why? Well, I've always been a traditional consumer of music. I listen to it on vinyl and CD (my cassette player broke years ago) and since everyone that can see this blog is online, obviously, I didn't find it too appealing to promote readily available methods of music consumption like digital downloading and audio streaming. 

I wanted more focus on vinyl and CD back when I created this blog and I'd only mention digital downloads if it was necessary...like if Ray would release a new song through an online digital music platform...and there wouldn't be a physical copy of a CD available. In times like those I'd discuss digital downloads. Lately, though, I've been making up for lost time and relaying the various online sites where you can find Ray's songs. Now, I know you all don't need me to inform you of those music sites, you're all capable of finding Ray's songs on your own, but as a blogger I started to think that I hadn't done much to promote the online presence Ray Stevens has had for about as long as I've been writing this blog. 

I title this blog entry with such a unique phrase because songs have hooks, and some songs can bait listeners, and streams are how practically all music consumers hear the music. Streaming is the much preferred method because it doesn't require the downloading of audio files onto your computer. However, record companies prefer people paying a fee of some sort whether the music is being streamed or being downloaded in the traditional sense of the word. If you purchase music on Amazon in their Digital music store they still offer the traditional downloading...the audio files you purchase will be sent as a download attachment to your e-mail address and from there you upload the audio to your listening device. Going back to a previous subject matter in the above paragraph...another reason why I didn't promote the online music presence of Ray Stevens (originally) is because I couldn't show it off in a photo. You can't hold in your hand an audio file for the camera. 

Oh, yes, in case you're new to this fan created blog, I post a lot of photos of myself showing off all kinds of Ray Stevens vinyl singles, vinyl albums, cassette tapes, CD's, VHS tapes, and DVDs...so subconsciously I must've avoided promoting online music because I couldn't hold it in front of a camera and click...unlike here, where I'm showing off one of my Ray Stevens items. This is Funniest Characters which was released in 2000. It's a CD featuring the audio tracks from the VHS tape, Funniest Video Characters. The photo is a screen cap from the music video of "The Blue Cyclone". 


Usually my blog entries aren't text heavy on top...so this is unique. When writing the blog entries I often lay it out like a newspaper and have a photo posted on either the left or right hand side of the page (the kind you see for newspaper columnists) and then midway or at the end I embed a video if I happen to be writing about a song. Curb Records has been busy the last several months...they've taken over some more previously released Ray Stevens albums. I wrote about 2000's Ear Candy and the 1995 soundtrack of Get Serious! being uploaded onto YouTube by Curb Records. Curb has also uploaded to YouTube Ray's 2009 One for the Road album (July 18th) and the 2011 Spirit of '76 album. The interesting thing about these YouTube audio tracks is if you read the fine print Curb Records used the album's original year of release. So, instead of seeing Spirit of '76 credited as 2011 Clyde Records you're now going to see the credit as 2011 Curb Records. It's like a retroactive credit. 

Curb also took over online distribution for Hum It, a comedy album Ray recorded in 1997 for MCA Records, and Curb did the same for several other albums Ray originally released on his own Clyde Records label. I've made mention of that before in a couple of previous blog entries but it often bears repeating. It's a testament to how much Curb Records feels about Ray Stevens...that they've put their name on some of the albums Ray recorded for his own label more than a decade ago. 

So far this year Ray hasn't hinted at any upcoming albums. He signed to Curb Records in 2020 following the recording session he had with Jeannie Seely which produced the duet, "Dance Tonight". They promptly issued a newly recorded version of "The Quarantine Song" and then a special 50th anniversary recording of "Everything is Beautiful"...complete with a new music video. Ray also issued a medley, "Everything is Beautiful / United We Stand". Then, in 2021, Curb issued Ray's 4-CD box set, Iconic Songs of the 20th Century. This was followed up with the novelty single, "Gas", in the summer of 2021. Then, in the fall of 2021, Curb Records issued the comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. If you add in all of the previously released albums that Curb Records has re-issued this year and last year it adds up to well over a dozen releases by Curb Records of Ray Stevens audio content. If you're curious you can read my Amazon review of the 4-CD box set by clicking HERE. The review was posted on Amazon almost a year ago...in late July 2021. 


One of the CDs in the box set from last year is titled Melancholy Fescue (High Class Bluegrass). Ray had the concept of this album all the way back in 2013...he put out a music video for "Unchained Melody" that year. He sang the song and a Bluegrass rendition of "Oh, Pretty Woman" during a guest appearance at the Grand Ole Opry in 2013...but following this nothing more was said about the potential Bluegrass album. In Ray's 2014 memoir he mentions future album concepts he's working on with titles such as Melancholy Fescue...so the albums in the 2021 box set were nearly a decade in the planning stages. Ray is quoted as having said that he plans on releasing sequels to his 9-CD Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music and his 4-CD Iconic Songs of the 20th Century. I have no doubt that he's racked up a lot of recordings over the last number of years...but figuring out when to release the music, plotting a marketing strategy, etc. is probably the reason why there hasn't been any news release hinting at new music. The "Unchained Melody" music video is inching closer and closer to the plateau of 1,000,000 unique views on YouTube. As of now it's sitting at 998,044...all it needs is 1,956 unique views to reach an even 1,000,000. I'm embedding the music video below...if this is your first time seeing the video, watch it, and share it with your friends...

July 23, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-9, S-1

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! If you've been paying attention to my blog entries lately you'll probably have noticed that there have been gaps between entries. This is because of my job...my hours have been changed to where I'm not available to author blog entries at all hours of the night and so I'll more than likely post the bulk of my forthcoming blog entries on my days off (Sunday and Monday) or like, now, in the hours after I get home from work...but if some sort of breaking news is released (like information of any new album or any new song emerges) I'll be sure and blog about it as soon as possible. This new schedule will take some getting used to.

Due to the new work schedule I'll no longer be home to watch the weekly YouTube premiere of Ray's CabaRay Nashville series. So, like now, I'll provide a re-cap once I get home from work. Last night's episode was Season One, Episode Nine guest starring John Conlee and Jeff Bates. Ray opened the show singing "Dang Me", the classic Roger Miller song. Ray recorded the song for his 2012 9-CD box set, The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. Ray and Roger were friends in the music industry. I don't know if they were close friends in the same way that Ray happened to be with Jerry Reed, Ralph Emery, or Chet Atkins...but Ray and Roger respected each other's immense talents. Ray demonstrated his under-used scat singing ability while performing "Dang Me". I've always wished Ray would incorporate more of that into his songs since he's capable of scat singing, proficiently, but with Ray it's almost always used as a source of laughter.

I've been a fan of John Conlee about as long as I've been a fan of Ray Stevens. I was discovering all kinds of country music singers in the early 1980s thanks to my parents and grandparents. I was actually listening to and, as a kid, attempting to sing John Conlee songs for several years before I discovered the songs of Ray Stevens. Some of the first songs from John that I remember hearing were "Common Man", "Busted", "Nothing Behind You and Nothing In Sight", and "Miss Emily's Picture". On this episode of CabaRay Nashville John sings "Common Man" after discussing his earlier career as a news reader on WLAC radio. 

The second guest is Jeff Bates. Ray mentioned that Jeff co-wrote a Christmas song...the song is "Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me". Ray recorded the song and put it out as a music video. Those of you are probably aware that Jeff Bates sounds incredibly like Conway Twitty on a lot of songs...particularly romantic songs...and on this episode he sings a Conway-type song called "Sleepin' In". Don Cusic appears as the music professor and tells the backstory of the novelty song, "Mr. Custer", which Ray sings to close out the show. Like the previous episodes this one is also a fast moving show. Each episode is typically 22 to 23 minutes including a couple of commercial breaks...one commercial airs at the beginning and another commercial airs at the end of the episode. The commercials are for the CabaRay showroom.

July 14, 2022

Ray Stevens: 20 years since Osama

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! In December 2001 the legend gave us a new novelty song, "Osama Yo' Mama". The single hit in the final weeks of December and throughout the first half of 2002 was a country music best seller. It sold hundreds of thousands of copies and was certified a GOLD single by the RIAA in 2002. Curb Records released the CD single and then in February 2002 they released Osama Yo' Mama: The Album. The cover art and graphics are the same as the CD single from December 2001...the only difference is that the CD single doesn't contain the banner that reads 'The Album' beneath Ray's name. Ray produced a music video of the song and it became available in 2002 as well. It was the main music video on a VHS collection that ultimately got released in 2003, Cartoon Video Collection. Ray appears in live action in the music video but there's computer animated backgrounds and characters inserted into the production. Randy Cullers handles much of the animation that you see in some of Ray's music videos and he often does caricature illustrations for Ray. That 2003 VHS features the "Osama Yo' Mama" music video as the closer. It's a VHS of 6 music videos. It's since been re-issued in DVD format and all of the music videos have long since become part of Ray's YouTube channel. This 2001 single and the subsequent 2002 album returned Ray Stevens to Curb Records after a brief hiatus. Ray had previously been signed to Curb/Capitol in 1990...but as a result of music industry conglomeration and the business itself Curb and Capitol split after their few years in tandem and Ray remained with Curb Records. Originally Ray recorded three studio albums for Curb Records (1990, 1991, and 1993) while the label released several other compilations on him (1990, 1991, 1995, and 1996). Ray then made a return to MCA Records in the latter half of 1996 and he recorded two studio albums for them in 1997. 

Throughout this early to mid 1990s time period Ray had a separate career as a music video star with a series of VHS releases on his own Clyde Records label. Curb Records eventually distributed two of Ray's early VHS releases to retail stores in 1993 and 1994, each following year long mail-order television advertisements. After Ray left Curb Records in 1996 and following the release of his second studio album for MCA in 1997 Ray was without a recording contract for the first time in decades. In 2000 he recorded a studio album called Ear Candy for his own Clyde Records label. Then, a few months after the terror attacks on September 11, 2001 Ray found himself with "Osama Yo' Mama" the following December and a return to Curb Records. The song was written by Ray Stevens and Buddy Kalb. The album features 10 songs...7 of them had previously appeared on Ear Candy. The three songs that weren't originally on Ear Candy were: "Osama Yo' Mama", "United We Stand", and a song Ray Stevens wrote called "Freudian Slip". "United We Stand" appeared as the B-side of the "Osama Yo' Mama" single. The 2002 Osama Yo' Mama: The Album reached the Country Top-40 on the album chart whereas the single reached the Top-50 on Billboard's Country Songs chart and it spent nearly half a year on Billboard's Country Single Sales chart. 

The Country Single Sales chart at this point in time was dominated by patriotic songs in the aftermath of 9/11. Ray had the only comical patriotic song...so it wasn't uncommon to see Billboard's Country Single Sales chart in the latter half of 2001 and throughout much of 2002 occupied by patriotic songs like Aaron Tippin's "Where The Stars and Stripes and the Eagle Flies", Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the U.S.A.", Charlie Daniels "This Ain't No Rag it's a Flag", and the LeAnn Rimes recording of "God Bless America". Ray remained on the Curb Records roster until 2005 following several single-only recordings: "Hello Mama", "We're Having a Baby the Natural Way", and "The New Battle of New Orleans". Afterward, Ray became an Independent recording artist...recording studio albums and continuing to produce music videos for his own Clyde Records label until returning to Curb Records in 2020. 

As many of you are well aware Ray Stevens has given us plenty of comedy songs over the decades. There are all types of comedy and if anything comedy is one of those areas of entertainment which is highly subjective. Comedy is something, in order for it to work, has to be appreciated by a listener. Since comedy is subjective there's always going to be the possibility that a comic may get the wrong audience...and that's probably the worst nightmare for any comedian. I've watched/listened to a wide variety of comedians and due to my sense of humor I either find it funny or I don't get it...and that's the very essence of subjectivity. In comedy there is also an intellectual component to it. Even though it may sound strange to some people, even in comedy where we think it's suppose to be all laughs and fun, there are comedians that are serious about comedy. In rare moments you'll see comedians criticize one another over what's funny or what's appropriate subject matter. 

Have you ever heard of the phrases low-brow and high-brow? A lot of comics who are cerebral in nature, have a dry wit, and satiric tend to have much more appreciation among the high-brow, or, high society...but the humor sometimes doesn't translate outside that group. On the other hand there's comedy that's derogatorily referred to as low-brow, sophomoric, or blue...which has much more commercial appeal or broad acceptance...but is looked down upon by the more cerebral humorists. Also, just typing the word 'humorist' has me wanting to go into detail about the styles of comedy and how some comics prefer to be known as comedians, satirists, humorists, parodists, or absurdist. Ray Stevens, as mentioned, has recorded all kinds of comedy...and because of this there are some who only appreciate the more satiric or the more 'sophisticated' kinds of comedy from his vast recording catalog. Then there are those who may not get the satire or sophisticated humor of some of Ray's songs and they gravitate or prefer the good ol' boy 'low-brow' comedy in some of his other songs. Who knew that comedy could be splintered into so many tiny subjective pieces? Here's the 2003 music video for "Hang Up and Drive", from the 2002 album...


Ray's 2002 album contains various kinds of comedy. There's obviously the topical comedy of "Osama Yo' Mama" but then there's pop-culture trends that provide laughs such as talking on the phone while driving, "Hang Up and Drive", as seen above. Radio shows featuring callers seeking marital and relationship advice...or to vent their frustrations...is satirized on the song "The Lady on the Radio". The art of storytelling comedy is found in "Bon Temps Roulette", a wild adventure detailing a woman at a Riverboat casino and her exploits throughout a night of gambling and who ended up taking her home. The subject of pool sharks dominate "The Hustler", a non-comical story about a young pool player seeking out a legendary pool shark for a chance to take the old timer's place as the greatest pool player. Buddy Kalb and his wife, Carlene, wrote the song and it had previously been recorded in Mel McDaniel in the 1980s. Ray wrote "Freudian Slip" which humorously tells of a nervous man and how tongue tied he gets when trying to speak to women...while arguably not necessarily representative of Freudian slips, according to psychologists, nonetheless that's the song's title and it's funny. The nostalgic "Safe at Home", from the pen of Nick Sibley, is another non-comical recording on the 2002 album. The album's closer is the inspirational "United We Stand". 

June 6, 2022

Ray Stevens: This Silver Anniversary will have you Humming...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! 2022 marks the Silver Anniversary of a comedy album from Ray Stevens and I'm here to spotlight it. It was 25 years ago, in 1997, that Ray released the Hum It comedy album. If you recall that particular year Ray was in his 40th year as a singer...having released his first singles in 1957...and several publicity pieces and interviewers made note of that fact. The record company, Rhino, issued a CD titled The Best of Ray Stevens. It featured a mini-booklet of liner notes by Dr. Demento and several photo's of Ray through the years. I played the CD so frequently that at one point it started to skip. I still have the CD, though. I'm not one for tossing out music that I've purchased unless I have a replacement standing by to take it's place. 

Hum It, the comedy album you see off to the left, got it's name based on a hypothetical joke about the Whistler's Mother painting. In an interview Ray once said that in naming the album they wondered what might've happened if Whistler's mother got tired of hearing the sound of whistling...would she tell her son to simply Hum It, instead? The joke based on the notion that her son went around whistling all the time. Get it? So, that's the story behind the album title. On the cover Ray is dressed as the Whistler's Mother painting and in the picture frame is Ray as a basketball referee, blowing a whistle. The comedy, for the most part, is just as cerebral as the backstory of the album's cover art. The album closer is the satirical "How Much Does It Cost To Fly To Albuquerque?" where we find Ray speaking to a fictional travel agent over the phone discussing ticket rates, frequent flyer rewards, and the overall quality of the airlines. Ray delivers a tale of lament and anguish in the song "My Neighbor" as he tells us what it's like for him and the wife living next door to the obnoxious. "I'll Be In Atlanta" is one of my all-time favorite Ray Stevens songs...an ode to Dixieland, the South, and an homage to the classic film, Gone With the Wind. The album opens up with "R.V.", a comedy song about a retired worker who purchases one but driving it isn't exactly what he'd had in mind. There's plenty of sound effects of crashes and glass shattering as Ray sings about having no room to turn onto different streets and that the height of the "R.V." was incorrectly marked...they crash into a canopy and then they come upon the inevitable overpass. 

"Mama Sang Bass", one of the songs that Ray performed on television in the early months of Hum It, features J.D. Sumner as the bass voiced Mama while Ray plays the part of tenor voiced Daddy. The song is about a married couple that work in a pharmaceutical factory. Mama works in the department that makes body building steroids while Daddy works in the department that manufactures birth control pills. As previously mentioned Ray and J.D. performed the song together on television in 1997...on an episode of Prime Time Country. J.D. wore a long, curly blond wig. The parody song was never released as an official single nor did it become a music video but it got a lot of notice back then given it's use of J.D. Sumner as 'Mama' and the fact it was a re-interpretation and parody of the Johnny Cash single, "Daddy Sang Bass". 

The two songs from the album that became music videos were "Virgil and the Moonshot", a novelty about a southern simpleton who works at NASA as a janitor who breaks company rules and enters the space capsule to play the role of an astronaut...unaware that it's an un-manned test capsule and it'll soon be launched into orbit. The song was written as a response to the 1995 blockbuster movie, Apollo 13. NASA and their Space Program saw a resurgence thanks in part to that movie. Virgil, at various moments in the song, utters the catchphrase from the movie in which over the radio we hear Houston being called and the astronaut says "we got a problem". Buddy Kalb appears in the video as the head of Mission Control.


The second song that became a music video from Hum It happens to be "Too Drunk To Fish". In this song Ray sings about a fishing trip...with Harold bringing along enough beer to open up a small store. In the music video Ray plays himself and Harold. Ray's frequent songwriting partner, Buddy Kalb, appears in the video sitting in a boat at the beginning and end...in addition to appearing at various moments during the group scenes. The official music video hasn't been uploaded onto Ray's YouTube channel but he did upload his performance of the song, which features snippets from the music video, from his guest appearance on The George Jones Show in 1997. You can listen to the audio tracks from Hum It on YouTube. Simply search for Ray Stevens and the album title and you'll be able to listen to the entire comedy album. 

May 23, 2022

Ray Stevens: YouTube Audio Tracks...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Curb Records, quietly, uploaded audio tracks onto YouTube on May 19th from some of Ray's albums in the 2000's. Specific Ray Stevens albums have been represented on all kinds of websites over the decades and some of the audio tracks are readily available on YouTube if you do a search for them. Sometimes an entire album is available to listen to and sometimes there are only a handful of songs available from an album to listen to. Curb Records uploaded the audio tracks from Ear Candy (2000); Hurricane (2007); and We The People (2010). Several other Ray Stevens fans that I frequently keep in contact with have always mentioned that a recording he did in 2000, "No Lawyers In Heaven", has never appeared on YouTube. Ray recorded an album in 2000 titled Ear Candy, which you see off to the right, and it was released on his own label, Clyde Records. This comedy album was a follow-up to his 1997 album, Christmas Through a Different Window, on MCA. Ear Candy was never released to retail stores (Clyde Records didn't have retail distribution) and I don't think it was available on Amazon, which was 5 years old at the time, and hadn't been in the Music shipping business too long after starting out as an online bookstore. I've looked over on Amazon and they do have this album listed as having been available at one time as a CD and they have it listed as an Mp3 digital download as well. The one thing that will confuse consumers at Amazon and listeners on YouTube is Ear Candy is listed as 2000 Curb Records...which is an error. Clyde Records released this in 2000. It also states that the album was released on January 1, 2000 (New Year's Day) and we all know that's an error. Ray Stevens has never issued an album on any holiday...let alone New Year's! 

"No Lawyers In Heaven" comes from the pens of Paul Craft and Billy Edd Wheeler. It was later recorded by Bluegrass singer, Charlie Sizemore, and it became a big award winning hit for him...but Ray was the first artist, as far as I know, to record the song. When Ear Candy was partially re-issued in 2002 by Curb Records as Osama Yo' Mama: The Album one of the two songs from Ear Candy that was omitted happened to be "No Lawyers In Heaven"...and so, chances are, only us fans are aware of Ray's recording of the song...but all this changes starting now. "No Lawyers In Heaven", as recorded by Ray Stevens, is now going to be shared on this blog entry which will soon make it's way to social media where I'll share it there, too...

April 8, 2022

Ray Stevens sings "It's Me Again, Margaret"...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! A few days ago Ray uploaded a performance of "It's Me Again, Margaret" taken from a concert he gave at Casino Rama in 2015. The concert happened to be taped and performance clips from that concert have appeared on Ray's YouTube channel in the last couple of years. If you ever see Ray Stevens in person you'll know that he rarely performs songs on stage the way he recorded them in the studio and from concert to concert he adds or subtracts lyrics. I've often felt he does this to establish a connection to the people in the audience...he looks out into the audience and sometimes smiles throughout a performance and often during a comedy song he'll use facial expressions or engage in other kinds of non-verbal comedy...purely to entertain an audience. I wonder if he intentionally performs the way he does because he wants to make it look real and natural? There are plenty of recording artists who've remarked that they block out everything when they reach the stage and they focus on the performance. I think Ray focuses heavily on the songs while he's in the recording studio...working on making what he feels will be the best recording...but once he hits the concert stage he perhaps can't, or doesn't want, to pretend there's no audience sitting out there and so I imagine that he loves communicating with an audience and wouldn't have it any other way. He puts emphasis on different lyrics in each performance as if he's striving to allow his songs to evolve and change...rather than sound exactly as they did on a recording. He also does stand-up/one liners in between his songs. 

"It's Me Again, Margaret" is a standard in Ray's career. It's been in his concerts ever since 1984 and in 1992 he made a music video of the song for the VHS, Comedy Video Classics. He performs the song, most of the time, while wearing a rumpled hat...but sometimes he doesn't. In some of the real early performances he didn't use a hat...but later on he began to use one...and probably seeing that it got laughs it became a fixture and it's turned into a beloved prop. I've seen performances where simply holding up the hat drew large applause...they knew from seeing the rumpled hat that the song was soon to be performed...it's the only song that I can think of that gathers anticipatory applause. I was in the audience at the CabaRay in 2018 and as if on cue once he began talking about the hat the audience began to applaud...and once the song was concluded there was thunderous applause and whistles. 

Here now is Ray Stevens, from 2015, performing that beloved novelty, "It's Me Again, Margaret", but this is one of those rare performances where he's not using the rumpled hat...but it's still fun to watch..

December 22, 2021

Ray Stevens: Current Comedy Album Update...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! We're now 3 days away until Christmas. I've purchased just about everything I planned on purchasing...and this is new for me because I'm usually part of the crowd that waits until the last minute. I was over on Amazon looking up information about the current comedy album from Ray Stevens, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. The product page for the CD copy over on Amazon can be found HERE. When you're there you'll see a link to the digital download/Mp3 of the album just in case you prefer the Mp3 over the compact disc.

Three days from Christmas and we find Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore continues to appear on Amazon's New Releases Top-100. In this hour the comedy CD is ranked 68. The music video release of "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" is nearing 200,000 unique views. I was going to write a blog entry promoting the fact of the music video nearing 200,000 but I decided I'd hold off and write a blog entry about it reaching 200,000...and this may be in the next few days or in the final days of 2021. The music video peaked in social media sharing by early November. The video had made it's debut on October 8th...the day the comedy album was released. The song that I'll continue to advocate to be his next single/video release is "Dis-Connected". Who says a person has to be 19 or 20 to feel the negative impact of social media in a person's life? Ray name dropping various social media platforms and inserting online jargon within the performance of the song are the hooks which create potential interest and attention. I'm hoping "Dis-Connected" gets more and more publicity in the new year.  

If you've been a fan of Ray Stevens or have known of him for only the last 10 to 12 years you'll know how much attention he gives to social media and YouTube in particular. He has his music and his music videos available for all to see so he's very much aware of the main social media sites and online music companies that are out there. It's true that he's entrusted a few close associates to run his social media (most often it's his grandson) but obviously Ray's aware of the power of social media and he's used the various opportunities the internet provides to reach audiences he ordinarily wouldn't be reaching. Radio and television stations cater to specific age groups whereas the internet is open to all age groups...meaning that your product is likely to be found/discovered on the internet a whole lot quicker than it would be if you waited around for radio or television to accept your product. "Dis-Connected" comes from the pen of Bryan Kennedy. The writer previously recorded the song and put it out and Ray delivers his rendition of the song on Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. I've shared "Dis-Connected" in the past but I'm sharing it again...