January 24, 2018

Ray Stevens...Happy Birthday

Happy Birthday to the one and only Ray Stevens!!! Born on this date in 1939 as Harold Ray Ragsdale in Clarkdale, Georgia. He became Ray Stevens in the late 1950s after he signed a recording contract with Prep Records, a subsidiary of Capitol Records. The change in stage name came as a result of his using his mother's maiden name, Stephens, but on records it became Stevens. The first recording from Ray came along in 1957 titled "Silver Bracelet".

Ray's earliest recordings for Prep, and later, Capitol itself were in the style of most teenage pop records in those days. If you hear one of those late '50s recordings from Ray you'll pick up on subtle phrasing...even back then. Ray was next in the studio of NRC after releasing a series of singles for Prep and Capitol (1957-1958). NRC is the label that seen a slight shift in vinyl persona as it was on this label that saw the eventual release of "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" in 1960. It being a full fledged comedy song and the fact that it was about a fictional character everybody knew meant that it was on it's way to being a commercial hit. The meteoric hit was stopped almost overnight when the owners of the Sgt. Preston character got word that someone was making money off of their copyright without permission. Lawyers contacted NRC and the hit in the making was taken out of circulation. Not too long after that Ray found himself at Mercury Records...and the first single release for the label was another comedy outing...and this one became a hit. "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills" reached the Top-40 of the pop charts in 1961. Ray moved to Nashville, TN in January of 1962 and he'd eventually have the monster hit that had eluded him over the last 5 years. 1962's "Ahab the Arab" not only hit the Top-10 of the pop chart but it crossed over and became a Top-10 Rhythm and Blues hit and a million seller in the process. After it's success more successes followed: "Harry the Hairy Ape" (Top-20 pop; Top-20 Rhythm and Blues), "Speed Ball" (Top-40 Rhythm and Blues), and the original "Santa Claus is Watching You" (Top-50 pop). He also charted with "Furthermore" and "Funny Man". After this run of success Ray became more and more focused on the making of records. He temporarily but his recording career on hold to become a session musician, producer, and arranger for the Monument Records label. In one of the most unique contracts in music history Ray remained a vocalist under contract with Mercury but had a separate contract with Monument for production work on other artists. 


Mercury continued to release recordings on Ray through 1965. As soon as the contract expired Monument was then able to start issuing commercial recordings on Ray. One of the things that listeners should take notice of is the maturity of his vocals once Monument began releasing singles on him. His voice had changed a little bit between the releases from Mercury and his debut single for Monument in 1966. In the photo above I'm attempting to mimic the pose Ray Stevens gave for his 1968 album, Even Stevens

Now, rather than this turn into a career look back, I'm going to fast forward to the present day. One of the big events that took place in the career of Ray Stevens happened just this past week...on January 18th...the grand opening of his showroom, CabaRay, in West Nashville. Season Five of his television series, CabaRay Nashville, is underway on PBS. 

Will there be an audio release in the near future? His last CD arrived in 2015, Here We Go Again!. He's issued two DVDs of his television series. Season One and Season Two. Each season of his series contains 13 episodes. Once Season Five airs it'll give him 65 half hour episodes. The next season will feature episodes taped at the CabaRay showroom. Someone many years ago said that Ray is like the Energizer bunny...his career keeps going and going and going...and here's to many, many more successes in audio, video, television, and on stage at the CabaRay!!! Happy Birthday, Ray!!!

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