January 6, 2019

Ray Stevens: Compilations at 30 and 35...

Hello all once again...in this particular blog entry I've decided to give some focus to a vinyl album that I personally do not own a copy of but I have all of the songs in my collection. I'm giving it a spotlight because I like the profile photo of Ray Stevens on the album's cover. The album I'm referring to is a release from 35 years ago in 1984 on Spot Records titled Greatest Hits. Now, as all of you fans of Ray Stevens should be fully aware of, there have been numerous compilation albums released on Ray over the decades both here in America and Internationally and some of the overseas releases have been imported to America from time to time. There are some releases that are manufactured overseas for the specific intent on importing the project to America.

I have spotlighted this 1984 compilation album before but given it's reaching a milestone in it's year of release I decided to spotlight it once more. Also...I'm sure a lot of you love reading about vinyl albums that have been released on Ray Stevens over the decades and I hope you get a kick out of seeing some of the photography and overall visual design of the releases, too. As I mentioned in the opening paragraph I don't personally own the 1984 album but I've known of it for years. Who knows? If I'm ever at a flea market or some music store that houses vintage vinyl I may come across this particular release...and if I do?? Oh yes, I'll give the vinyl a going over if the album itself is unsealed...but I'd ultimately buy it just for the sake of having it in my personal collection at long last. Now, upon reading that, I assume some of you may be asking yourselves: "can't you just look it up on-line and purchase it from some on-line seller??". I could very easily do that...and I may end up doing just that...but procrastination is something that often dominates my personality of lot of time...and I put things off without any particular reason...it's as if put things off just to put things off. Anyway...this vinyl album features an earlier photo of Ray on the flip side of the album cover...taken from perhaps the very early 1970s. I've never discovered the actual era in which the photo you see above and the similar photo you see below were taken. Well, I'd say 1978/1979...but then again it could be from any time during the early 1980s in order for the photo to make an appearance on a 1984-released compilation album.

The 1984 compilation features mostly serious songs but it has it's share of necessary additions of his more widely known comical recordings. One of those serious recordings is "Have a Little Talk with Myself" from 1969. The song is wonderful and it has a sing-a-long melody. It was the title track of one of his 1969 albums for Monument. It's appeared on a couple of gospel oriented compilation albums on Ray even though it's not exactly a gospel song in the traditional sense. It's a song that has to do with values and the priorities placed in life and how easy it can be to get side-tracked and egotistical once one experiences success and wealth fairly quickly. The Greatest Hits album also features his take on "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", also from 1969. It's become notable in Ray's career considering he was the first artist to record it and it was the first single of his to appear on the country music charts. It became a chart hit for Ray but became a massive hit for Johnny Cash in 1970. "Everything is Beautiful", from 1970, became a massive pop hit and sold millions of singles...spending several weeks at number one on both the pop and Adult-Contemporary charts. The song went on to win a Grammy early in 1971...two in fact...one for Ray as Best Male Pop Vocal Performance and another for Jake Hess who won a Grammy in the Best Sacred Performance category.

The following three paragraphs deal with the topic of music snobbery in general. I know it sticks out like a sore thumb because it breaks the flow of the text but it's something I felt I needed to add as a response to an on-line diatribe I recently came across concerning "Everything is Beautiful". The author of the commentary and those that provided visitor comments certainly made their opinions known about the song and Ray, in general, and so it's my turn to provide my response as a Ray Stevens fan.

**- I love the song...but being a fan of Ray that's probably already a given...but I've known for years that there are plenty that do not like the song and they have their reasons and they'll voice their hatred for all to see...and I'll voice my love of the song for all to see. Anyway, a majority of those detractors I feel simply hate the style of music "Everything is Beautiful" is built around and or the emotions and mood they feel it represents (sentimentalism, happy, easy-listening, non-threatening). You know? The kind of music that they (detractors) see as anti-rock and roll, not cool, bland, and therefore, in their self-absorbed astute judgement, they feel the songs or artists they dislike should be banned from ever being heard by anybody.

Music snobs are a silly but holier-than-thou bunch who proclaim to be the authority on what's great and what's not but never are they willing to acknowledge the fundamental fact that music is one hundred percent subjective. The ironic thing about music snobs is the fact that in their self-obsessed proclamations they fail to see just how subjective, not objective, they themselves happen to be. There's a fine line between music snobbery and fanaticism. In fanaticism it's all about a person enjoying the music of an artist or group and they share their love of the music in blogs like this...hoping that other like-minded fans will become regular viewers/readers of the blog and maybe learn something about the singer or that singer's recordings.

In the realm of music snobbery a person will say how much the music they listen to is better than what someone else listens to which goes hand in hand with the presence of trash talking the music or the performing style of whatever artist it happens to be because it's different than the music they personally choose to listen to. Trash talking, brow beating, and music snobbery is rampant in social media and in everyday life, actually...but in this blog hopefully I represent my fanaticism of Ray Stevens in an enthusiastic, enjoyable manner...maybe for some I come off obnoxious but yet if I come off that way then maybe you're not as big a fan of Ray as I am. -**

But getting back to the profile photo of Ray...

A similar photo has often appeared on other compilation albums...specifically on a couple of releases from Mercury Records in 1989 titled Ahab the Arab and a re-release of that compilation titled Funny Man. Those two releases hit 30 this year and each of them had the same track lists, used the same photo of Ray along with the same font style and color of the lettering...my guess is Mercury had two separate distribution concepts and decided to issue the eight song compilation under one title in certain markets and under another title in other markets. Whatever the reason for Mercury issuing what's essentially the same album but under two different titles is something we'll perhaps never know but here are those two compilation releases side by side...

To add some confusion to the matter and possible intrigue (?) there's another release of Ahab the Arab which contains a larger image of Ray but the font/overall letting design is much different but the track list remains the same. What about the eight song track list? The songs included on this project are: "Ahab the Arab", "Furthermore", "Funny Man", "The Deodorant Song", "Harry the Hairy Ape", "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies", "Speed Ball", and "Bubble Gum the Bubble Dancer". When the Funny Man cassette came into my possession in the early 1990s I had already become familiar with Ray's early '60s recordings on Mercury by way of a 1987 re-issue of The Best of Ray Stevens which had originally been released on Mercury in 1970 on vinyl. That project features a live recording of "Ahab the Arab" from a television series featuring Ralph Emery...you'll hear Ralph speak about Ray and introduce him as well. Anyway, the Funny Man compilation featured a pair of songs I'd never heard before: "The Deodorant Song" and "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". Yes, the inclusion of those two songs prompted my desire to have the cassette in my collection. Remember...this was years before the internet became what we know it as today...and you didn't have the luxury to purchase specific songs for 99 cents a piece and for some people fanatic enough (myself included) to see a cassette featuring some songs by your favorite singer that you'd never heard before in spite of the majority of the track list being in your collection already you'd go ahead and make the purchase just for those couple of unheard of before recordings...at least that's the way I happened to be in the years before I was on-line.

The image off to the right is from a third release of the eight song Mercury compilation album. I happen to like this album cover more than the other one mainly because the image is larger but yet the lettering covers the microphone. Also notice that depending on the photo you're looking at the color of the jacket he's wearing is either a darker yellow or a bright yellow. Ray's first two studio albums for Mercury Records (released in 1962 and 1963) have both seen CD reissues but there's never been a release that features all of his material for Mercury Records in one collection. Ray continued recording and releasing songs for Mercury into the mid 1960s but the practice/policy of practically every record company in all formats of music back then was that a single release had to sell a certain amount of copies and or become a radio hit before a label would consider releasing a long-playing album (LP) on that artist. This is why a lot of albums from the 1950s through the mid 1970s were named after the hit single while the remainder of the songs on the album went unreleased. The single releases from Mercury on Ray during the years of 1964 and 1965 didn't register as hits either in sales or radio airplay and so there weren't any albums issued featuring those recordings. This holds true for the first series of single releases Ray recorded for Monument Records between 1966 and the middle part of 1968. It wasn't until after Ray had a commercial hit with 1968's "Mr. Businessman" did Monument issue a full album (titled Even Stevens). Ray recorded for Mercury Records from 1961 to 1965. He did production work for Monument Records from 1963 to 1966. He recorded for Monument Records from 1966 to 1969.

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