Hello one and all...and on today's fan created blog entry I'm supplying a link to a lengthy interview by Ray Stevens. The interview took place fairly recently...with the Podcast upload date being October 11th but I'm not sure when the actual interview itself took place. The interview is conducted by George Gruhn for a series called
Gruhn's Vault: Conversations with the Masters. The archives indicate the series began earlier this year (in March) with an alternating time slot...which means that episodes air every other week. The show's previous episode aired on September 27th, for example. This interview is a real treat for those that love to hear Ray talk shop...few interviews of him rarely delve into the inner workings of the recording industry or give him the chance to discuss the art of making music and the relationship that exists between artists, writers, musicians, producers, and the business end of the music industry.
Ray touches upon practically every aspect of his career...along the way he discusses his life growing up in Georgia and his earliest exposure to music. He speaks of his mom insisting he practice playing piano and as Ray put it he seen it as something of a trade-off because she'd say that he could go out and play baseball with all of his friends only
after practicing his piano lessons. If you've seen or if you own, as I do on VHS and DVD, Ray's movie titled
Get Serious! it opens up with an actor playing a child version of Ray at the piano and an actress portraying, from the waist down, his mom. In the next scene we again see Ray, as a boy, being taught timing with aid from a metronome from an Austrian pianist also seen from the waist down (Ray himself played that role). Anyway, Ray discusses his path into the music industry. The history of Nashville and the recording studios is a focal point of most of the interview as Ray speaks about the composition of music and explains music arranging...and while listening to him you will hear just how mathematical and scientifically precise everything needs to be when making a recording.
He explains the pros and cons of the technological advances in the recording process and describes the elation he felt every time a console board increased it's track capabilities. He describes the evolution of using 3-track, 8-track, 16-track, 24-track recording concepts and explains how wonderful it is that everything can become perfect thanks to the advancement of technology and the multi-track process. In one segment of the interview he describes, in detail, the numbering system used on music charts and how, thanks to technology, you can look at/hear every instrument's individual performance in post-production on a computer screen due to everything being recorded separately and detect any flat notes or mistakes that can be corrected prior to the final mixing and mastering process. The interview isn't all about the recording studio, though. Ray speaks about some of his hit songs and his experiences in Branson, Missouri as well as his current showroom,
CabaRay.
Near the end of the interview Ray mentions several long-awaited and much anticipated projects that he's been working on for a number of years...and for one project in particular it's something that Ray's made mention of for more than 5 years...a project he's referred to as
Melancholy Fescue. He's spoke of this specific project since 2013. In fact it was exactly five years ago this month in October of 2013 that Ray uploaded a music video onto YouTube of a song that is to be included on this
Melancholy Fescue project. I'm not embedding the video due to my wanting this blog entry to be exclusively text but I'll make mention of the song's title, it's "
Unchained Melody". The other project is
Slow Dance and he made mention of this project on an episode of his
CabaRay Nashville television series. Speaking of which he offers some insight into what he hopes will come of his television series in the next calendar year when production of new episodes is suppose to resume at some point. You can listen to the George Gruhn interview of Ray Stevens by clicking
HERE.
This interview on George Gruhn's podcast comes on the heels of another similar type of interview Ray gave to Bobby Bare that I provided a link to in a recent blog entry. That podcast series also airs in an alternate schedule. The episode of Bobby's series that featured Ray Stevens as a special guest was uploaded on September 26th and so you can see the close proximity from one interview to the other (September 26th and October 11th). Bobby's series is called
Bobby Bare and Friends which was
also the name of his television series on
The Nashville Network in the 1980s (1983-1988).