Showing posts with label socks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label socks. Show all posts

August 8, 2020

Ray Stevens asks "Where Do My Socks Go?"...

Hello all fans of Ray Stevens!! Well, it's been a week since my previous blog entry...hard to believe but I hadn't posted a new blog entry since August 1st. I've not been off-line. I decided to take one of my self-imposed hiatuses from the blog site...but I've remained active on Ray's social media pages so it's not like I've had any kind of hiatus from all things Ray Stevens. In fact this blog entry is spotlighting the audio clip of a 1990 recording, "Where Do My Socks Go?", from the comedy album Lend Me Your Ears.



1990 not only marked a new decade but it also marked a change in record labels for Ray. He'd spent five years with MCA (1984-1989) and in 1990 he signed a recording contract with Curb/Capitol Records. "Where Do My Socks Go?" features some funky music accompaniment and his debut album for the label is an overall departure from the sound of his MCA recordings. His recordings seemed to have a more electronic/computer driven quality on the 1990 album. I've never been able to describe it in words but to my ears there's a definite change in production technique from the 1989 to the 1990 album and beyond.

Ray Stevens; 1991
In my hiatus from blogging I also came across a YouTube upload of Hee Haw from 1991. Some may ask: "okay?". Well this video clip, as of this writing, is erroneously credited as 1989 and there's no tag indicating the clip features Ray Stevens. In fact, I came across the video by accident. I was watching Hee Haw video clips at random the other day on a YouTube channel called Hee Haw 50th Anniversary. As soon as I started watching the video embedded below I knew it was a 1991 episode because Roy Clark wasn't joined by a guest co-host and the show still had it's haybale and cornfield set. The program removed the haybales and cornfield for the episodes that aired during the 1991-1992 season. Roy was the main host of the show for the 1990-1991 and 1991-1992 seasons. I also knew the episode was from 1991 because Ray's singing songs from his 1990 Lend Me Your Ears album. He sings "Where Do My Socks Go?" and "Barbeque". The video is a full-length episode. The uploader also included commercials. The other guest stars on this January 1991 episode are The Forrester Sisters. This happened to be Ray's final appearance on Hee Haw. As mentioned the show went through a major overhaul at the end of the 1990-1991 season. The producers removed the rustic, rural look and took out the haybales, cornfield, straw hats, and moonshine jugs and when the show returned for the 1991-1992 season (three months late) in January 1992 it had an urban setting and was retitled The Hee Haw Show. The only cast member that retained their traditional look was Grandpa Jones...everyone else wore casual clothes. Anyway, enjoy this January 1991 episode of Hee Haw guest starring Ray Stevens...


April 8, 2012

Ray Stevens and the Easter Bunnies...

There's not been too many recordings from Ray Stevens that specifically dealt with Easter but there's a few that incorporate the Easter bunny and Easter eggs into the lyrics. A masterpiece that Ray wrote, well, one of the masterpieces, is a clever song combining all the holidays into one celebration in a song titled "Greatest Little Christmas Ever Wuz". Obviously the song's title is associated with Christmas...but in that particular recording, as mentioned, Ray tells of how a wonderful holiday can be enjoyed when all the holidays are combined on one single day of the year. The song itself is a tale of a couple who've broken up and the man comes up with what he feels is a surefire way to get her to return. The song has a unique history...it first appeared on an MCA various artists album from 1985 called Tennessee Christmas. Ray brought it back in 1997 for his comical Christmas Through a Different Window CD.

In 1987, toward the end of the "Gourmet Restaurant" song, Ray mentions chocolate eggs and chocolate bunny rabbits, candy closely associated with Easter. In 1990 during the fade-out of a song titled "Where Do My Socks Go?" Ray wonders if the Easter Bunny is the culprit and warns people about getting eggs with rather questionable content inside on Easter. Interestingly, Ray's 1990 album titled Lend Me Your Ears features a rabbit on the album's cover...but this isn't a reference to Easter but more of a visual joke on part of an often-quoted phrase delivered in the Julius Caesar play. Other than those three recordings I couldn't come up with any other song from Ray that specifically mentions Easter, the Easter Bunny, chocolate eggs, etc. etc.

For those who want to hear those songs and a whole lot more look for the following Mp3's at Amazon...

1. Crackin' Up; 1987 MCA Records

2. Lend Me Your Ears; 1990 Curb Records

Christmas Through a Different Window can easily be purchased at Ray's web-store.

Ray has released religious music down through the years...his only traditional gospel album continues to be 1972's Turn Your Radio On. That one album spawned a series of re-issues over the last 40 years typically using the same album title but incorporating a different picture of Ray each time. One of the re-issues from the early '90s was called The Gospel Side of Ray Stevens and they used a small clean-shaven image of Ray. Another re-issue several years later in 1996, Great Gospel Songs, used a fairly recent picture. One of my favorite pictures of Ray was used on the 1982 re-issue. His own label, Clyde Records, issued a 2-volume set of gospel recordings titled A Brighter Day in 1992. This collection put together not only the recordings from Turn Your Radio On but selected recordings from Ray through the years with a gospel/inspirational overtone like "Everybody Needs a Rainbow", "Set the Children Free", and others. A fairly recent compilation, A Funny Thing Happened in Church Today, goes in the opposite direction...it shines the light on some of the comical songs Ray recorded with a gospel flavor or a church setting. Songs include "The Dooright Family", "Mississippi Squirrel Revival", "Mama Sang Bass", and the 2009 recording, "The Right Reverend Road Hog McGraw" from One for the Road...but it also contains non-comical favorites like "Turn Your Radio On", "When The Saints Go Marching In", and "Everything Is Beautiful". "When the Saints Go Marching In" comes from his stellar salute to Louisiana on the CD titled New Orleans Moon from 2007. 

Those Clyde Records releases can be found at Ray's web-store. Simply visit the link I provided above or go to Ray's web-page below and click "Store" and browse around. You'll definitely find things that have never been offered in retail stores!

Ray Stevens Web-Site

April 19, 2010

Let's enjoy Ray Stevens doing the laundry!!

20 years ago in 1990 Ray Stevens had just signed with Curb Records and immediately set the stage for his next success: music videos. Ray issued two back-to-back music videos of a couple of songs found on this 1990 release. The album is titled Lend Me Your Ears and as most people should know Ray is dressed as Julius Caesar on the cover. The album's title uses part of a phrase uttered by Mark Antony in the Julius Caesar Shakespeare play but it also has a secondary meaning...care to guess what that second meaning might be? Well, simply put, the phrase can also be a request to music buyers to lend their ears to Ray's latest comedy album. I spoke of this album quite awhile ago when I was writing about Ray's first years on Curb Records and the albums the label had released on Ray during 1990-1995.

Ray Stevens takes you on a trip to the laundry room in one of the songs contained on the 1990 album. "Where Do My Socks Go?" is a bouncy song about a man's curiosity of why his socks continue to vanish when he goes to grab his clothes from the dryer. It's one of those bachelor-type comedy songs Ray sometimes does and in this one we're to assume that the man in the song lives on his own and doesn't really care to know that much about washing machines, detergent, dryers, etc etc. Now, of course, static cling is the answer to why so many socks disappear...they're found hiding up shirt sleeves and down pants legs. That premise is exaggerated in this song as Ray insists that socks really have disappeared and it's much more than static cling...the dryer is almost UFO like in Ray's mind...but he lets us know about the certain kinds of socks that never disappear. Ray performed this song on an episode of Hee-Haw and I remember when the song was over the audience threw waded up socks at him...no joke! After the sock assault ended, Ray exclaimed something like: "so that's where they went!??!"

Eagle-eyed Ray Stevens fans will note that the cassette version of Lend Me Your Ears has track number five written as "Bwana and the Jungle Girl" while on the CD re-release the song's title is slightly altered as "Bwana and His Jungle Girl". The CD version was released in 2005...a full 15 years after it originally hit the market.

Track List:
1. Sittin' Up with the Dead
2. Jack Daniels, You Lied To Me Again
3. Help Me Make It Through the Night
4. Used Cars
5. Bwana and His Jungle Girl
6. Barbeque
7. Where Do My Socks Go?
8. This Ain't Exactly What I Had In Mind
9. This Is Your Daddy's Oldsmobile
10. Cletus McHicks and His Band from the Sticks