Hello once more...as one could perhaps guess from the blog entry title this particular installment puts "Gitarzan" front and center. It was this week in 1969 that the Ray Stevens single seen it's release. The official release date was January 6, 1969 and so this is the song's Golden Anniversary week (50 years). The song itself is a comical parody of the Tarzan character featuring vocal impressions from Ray of the leading character as well as Jane and their pet chimp. The merging of Tarzan and pop music came together in this novelty record from the pen of Ray Stevens while the song's title, which merged guitar with Tarzan, came from the mind of session musician and recording artist, Bill Justis. He's credited as a co-writer under his birth name of William Everette.
Over the years the song's become, of course, a staple of his concerts...it reached the Top-10 on the pop charts and sold more than a million copies which earned it a Gold Record from the music industry. The success of the single wasn't limited to American audiences...it hit the pop music charts internationally. The single's peak arrived in the spring of 1969 (the April/May time frame). I was doing a little bit of further research and discovered that in the latter half of May 1969 the weekly chart publication, Billboard, debut it's Canadian music charts. In the first ever Canadian pop music singles chart "Gitarzan" was ranked among the week's Top-10 singles.
I'll be posting a couple of performances of the song in chronological order from several television appearances. The first one being from his 1970 summer television show. In each presentation the song grows more and more into a comedy sketch.
In a performance from nearly a year later, in 1971...
The early 1990s performance from his Branson, Missouri theater
represents the often performed presentation of the song in which Ray
enlists a female actress or one of his back-up singers to portray the
part of Jane while the chimp is either performed vocally by Ray, or, some
unidentified person is on stage dressed as an ape prancing around to
Ray's monkey vocalizations.
I'm not insisting you all should view every video clip...you can pick and choose...or if you want to you can certainly watch each of them. The reason I'm inserting various performances of the song is I find it interesting how the song is performed in each time period...some performances are more elaborate, vocally, while others incorporate a lot of additional dialogue not heard in the original recording. In that sense I think you should view each of the video clips so you can see the various performances of the song. I'm focusing on the live performances which is why the official music video (from 1995) isn't part of this video clip time-line.
The fourth video clip is from last year and it comes from an episode of his CabaRay Nashville television series. It was uploaded onto YouTube in September of 2018.
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