January 31, 2023

Ray Stevens: "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" surpasses 300,000 unique views

Hello fans of Ray Stevens! Well, I write a blog entry a couple of days ago spotlighting the comedy video "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" nearing the 300,000 unique view plateau and here we are less than 2 days later and it's vaulted past the 300,000 mark. I was thinking it would only be a matter of time but wasn't sure that it would move into the 300,000 level as quickly as it did considering that it isn't being heavily promoted on social media as it once was. The video hit in October 2021 and so it's been available online for a little more than a year. The specific view count is 300,174...a pickup of 256 unique views since January 29th. I'll go out on a limb and say it was my blog entry a couple of days ago that helped push the video past 300,000 sooner rather than later. 

Something funny happened when I went to share the January 29th blog on social media. I included a link to the blog entry plus I included the video link as well. I get a message almost instantly declaring that the video I shared may contain sensitive/offensive material (?) and that it was blocked.

Now, of course, we all know the music video is harmless but it dawned on me that the video's link must've been coded to automatically set off a warning whenever anyone goes to share it. It was then that I come to the conclusion that the video's inability to be shared is what caused it to disappear from social media platforms seemingly overnight. It's something I noticed but never made mention of in any blog entry until now. In the days/weeks/months after the video made it's debut it was being shared all over the place but then it vanished. I never did accept the possibility that the video simply stopped being shared/re-posted by people on social media. I didn't accept it because it made no sense...a video doesn't just stop being shared by a mass audience all at once...and so a lot of the potential exposure the comedy video could've been getting was directly impacted. 

If I had not attempted to post a link to the "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" video the other day I wouldn't have known the video was kept from being shared. The unique views that the video continues to get is truly organic...people are finding it when they search for Ray Stevens music videos since posting a direct link to the video on a certain social media platform is a no-no. My guess is those who made the decision to keep the comedy video from being shared assume it's raunchy or lewd given the video's thumbnail image of Ray standing next to the dancer. It's harmless, comical...some may say absurd...but it's certainly not offensive, raunchy, or lewd in any way. See for yourselves...   

January 30, 2023

Ray Stevens: The Golden Losin' Streak Remembrance

Ray Stevens rocks out in this 1973 photograph...a close-up of the image appearing on his Losin' Streak album. That particular album reaches 50 this year and I'm giving a golden anniversary remembrance to that one of a kind album. If you follow Ray's career then you're very aware of how obscure, under-rated, and unheralded this 1973 album happens to be in comparison to some of his other albums of the same time period. Ray remarked that the album's title ironically described his recording career at that moment in time. He remarked that he was on a commercial losing streak...but no matter...his artistic display more than make up for it. This album was recorded in what Ray nicknamed The Ray Stevens Sound Laboratory. He had recently opened up his own recording studio after having spent years recording in numerous studios along Music Row. He would also rent out the studio to other record producers and artists. Ray kept this studio open for several years even though he personally stopped recording at the location a year later, in 1974, when he opened up a studio on Grand Avenue. That studio remained his base of operations for 45 years until 2019. The production of Losin' Streak was originally meant to be a focal point had the album been promoted as it should have been. There are several songs on this album that play around with Ray's vocalization...and the music arrangements and the overall sound all carry an experimental flavor. The albums Ray released before and after Losin' Streak lack the specific sound heard throughout this album. The album features an instrumental track that Ray composed, "Laid Back". 

Now, for those who like to be picky, the 1973 album is officially titled Ray Stevens featuring Losin' Streak but I prefer to just call it Losin' Streak. The album contains 11 songs...and Ray is the writer of 5 of the songs. Although Ray had always included songs written by others on his albums it's worth noting that on this particular album and in another album released the same year he was expanding and including more songs from other writers. One writer in particular being Layng Martine, Jr. The tracks "Being Friends" and "Idaho Wine" were from the pen of Layng Martine, Jr. It was in 1973 that Ray 'discovered' Layng Martine, Jr. and signed him to his publishing company (Ahab Music, Co.). The story goes that Layng sought out Ray and said how much of a fan he happened to be and that he wanted to write songs for Ray. Ray published almost every song Layng wrote in this early '70s time period and the biggest Layng Martine, Jr. song Ray published, as far as airplay and sales is concerned, turned out to be "Rub It In", a song that became a massive hit for Billy 'Crash' Craddock. Ray had actually produced a recording of the song by Layng Martine, Jr. but it wasn't a major hit. It reached the charts, though. Now, getting back to Ray's Losin' Streak album... the album's title track, "Losin' Streak", wasn't written by Ray Stevens as some may have thought. The song was written by a writer named Nick Van Maarth. The title track has a very memorable electric guitar and steel guitar blending together...and the up-tempo performance sets the mood for most of the album. "This is Your Life", one of the songs Ray wrote, is the song I imagine Ray is singing on the album's cover. The song contains a shouter of a chorus...some may say he's belting out the lyrics. One of the themes throughout the album is inspiration. "This is Your Life" is a song of inspiration but the one that has inspiration all over it is another Ray Stevens composition, "Inside". Tupper Saussy wrote the positive, reassuring "Things Work Out". Ray brings back a song he originally recorded in 1963, the self-penned "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". It's a partial re-write, too, as he changes some of the lyrics in the last half of the song in addition to giving it a new music arrangement. Ray also gives a new arrangement to "Bye Bye Love", the classic pop hit by The Everly Brothers. In Ray's rendition the song is changed from an up-tempo sing-a-long to a bluesy ballad. The self-penned "What Do You Know?" closes out the 1973 album. 

I'm closing this blog entry with a couple of audio tracks. One of the tracks is "This is Your Life". Listen to Ray's performance and take in the glorious music arrangement. I'm also going to include the audio track of "Inside". That song would eventually end up as a B-side to a 1974 single-only release from Ray titled "Everybody Needs a Rainbow". The A-side was written by Layng Martine, Jr. The YouTube audio tracks were uploaded by another Ray Stevens fan named Randall Hamm.


 

Ray Stevens: The Melancholy Fescue YouTube Page

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! As I'm sure you all know by now if you look up several Ray Stevens albums on YouTube you're going to find audio tracks from the albums in the search results. The complete albums are available to listen to on YouTube. In case you've never done it by now all you have to do is type in Ray's name and the album you're looking up. Now, keep in mind, not every single album from him is available to listen to on YouTube but a good chunk of them are. An album from a more recent vintage is 2021's Melancholy Fescue. It's such a wonderfully produced and recorded album...in one of my reviews I think I used the word, exquisite, to describe how I felt about the overall album. It's an album of 12 songs. The YouTube page for the album contains audio tracks to 11 of the 12 songs. "Unchained Melody", since it was previously made into an official music video, it's featured on the YouTube page for Melancholy Fescue instead of just an audio track. The music video's gotten more than 1,000,000 unique views. The YouTube playlist for the album can be found HERE.

The audio track with the most YouTube plays is "Ruby/Ruby Baby" at 5.6K followed closely by "Goin' Out Of My Head" at 4.8K. The third most played audio track from Melancholy Fescue is "Oh, Pretty Woman" at 3.4K. His rendition of "Can't Take My Eyes Off You", such a fun song, is nearing 1,000 plays as is "Twilight Time". The track that has the fewest plays is his version of "People", a song previously recorded by Barbra Streisand in 1964. It's gotten 565 plays. When you do a YouTube for Ray and the song, "People", you will not find it among the first dozen or so results. Instead what you'll get first are songs from Ray with the word, people, in the title...and although the song is called "People" you'll have to scroll through numerous video uploads to find the actual song, "People". I'm pretty sure that sort of thing is why the audio track has only gotten 565 plays, to date. If you search for the name of the album you're going to find "People" more quicker than if you do a general search for the Ray Stevens recording. The lack of exposure, apparently, for "People" is why I'm embedding the video to close out this blog entry. I know you're going to love it if you've never heard it...and if you've heard Ray's recording already I know you're going to love hearing it again!