The concert features a voice over/introduction by one of Ray's longtime friends, Ralph Emery. Ray emerges onto the stage and performs "Such a Night", a song he recorded in 1982 for his Don't Laugh Now album. It's become his concert opener...and since I've not been to a lot of his concerts (for economic/travel reasons) I don't know how many years he's opened his concerts with the song. To date I've attended a concert of his in Renfro Valley, Kentucky as well as one in Nashville, Indiana and then earlier this year at his CabaRay in Nashville, Tennessee. Anyway the concert took me back to that era in his career and I think most fans of Ray Stevens will take the same things away from the concert as I did. It shows that Ray has a restless creativity and is forever changing in the manner in which he delivers a concert or a performance. This is also several years before he released his memoir or began his television series and obviously a number of years before construction of the CabaRay showroom was ever started. In my eyes, at least, the Ray Stevens we see in this 2010 concert is different than the Ray Stevens we see on his CabaRay Nashville television series or in person at the CabaRay showroom. On the surface it seems as if Ray remains the same and yet when you go back and look at concert performances in chronological order you'll see a lot of evolution and change but it isn't drastic and therefore it doesn't overshadow his recordings or whatever it happens to be that he's working on.
In recent years Ray's abbreviated "Shriner's Convention" to just the opening verse and the first phone call between Bubba and Coy which conveniently inserts a line from the final phone call to wrap-up the one sided phone conversation and on this DVD the abbreviated performance is included. I don't know if the abbreviated performance is done for time constraints that are out of his control or if it's become something of a habit of shortening the song in an effort to have it part of the concert without having to perform it in it's entirety...the song is well over five minutes, though...maybe he feels the length of the song doesn't play well in a concert setting anymore since it's mostly a narration piece and most people nowadays have short attention spans. It's anyone's guess. Stand-up comedy returns in the form of Ray speaking about how he grew up listening to gospel music and how he was always marveling at how low bass singers could get. The gospel recollections conclude with a Dolly Parton joke. "Turn Your Radio On" is performed and almost immediately afterward he tells several jokes centering around his grandfather.
As we near the end of the concert Ray performs "Misty" and then "It's Me Again, Margaret". Ray tells some more jokes including one that some may think is crude or not family friendly but it's hysterical. "The Mississippi Squirrel Revival" is then performed and this is followed by one more joke centering around Ray's grandmother. "Everything is Beautiful" is performed and the concert closes with "The Streak". As mentioned near the top of this blog entry Ray was performing a series of concerts at The Welk Theater in the fall of 2010. Ray's overwhelming YouTube success (November 2009 through spring 2013) he says afforded him the opportunity to reach audiences he otherwise never would've dreamed of reaching and it led to his concerts at The Welk Theater...a venue that probably wouldn't have had Ray Stevens on the radar beforehand. Several years later Ray would perform a series of concerts at the Andy Williams theater as part of a memorial. Andy had passed away in 2012 and the next month Ray was among the many performers that gave concerts at Andy's theater as a kind of send-off and a celebration of his career. In the ensuing years Ray performed select concerts at Andy's theater...culminating in a limited series of concerts in 2016 and those concerts unofficially or officially, depending on how one looks at it, but they marked the end of his professional involvement with Branson, Missouri as he set his sights on the construction of his CabaRay showroom on River Road in West Nashville, TN (which opened to the public in January of this year).
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