Given the descriptive nickname of 'energizer bunny' it's accuracy can be backed up by the simple fact that Ray continues to perform and record to this day...and on this day he reaches 80. Last year his showroom in West Nashville, CabaRay, had it's grand opening. The showroom opened it's doors to the public in January of 2018 and so it's been in operation for a year. Ray began hosting a television series called Ray Stevens' Nashville in November of 2015 which was later rebranded as CabaRay Nashville in June of 2017. The series mixes performances and conversation...with Ray's red piano serving as a substitute for a desk. It's a fast moving half hour series that's had a quirky broadcast schedule. It originally aired on RFD-TV for a season (26 episodes) and then it moved into local PBS syndication in January 2017. The series continues to air in local PBS syndication but last month it marked a return to the RFD-TV airwaves. The cable channel is catching up on episodes that have been airing in local PBS syndication and I'm sure production on additional episodes will get underway as we move deeper into 2019. In March the CabaRay will begin the 2019 season of concerts. Now then...every career begins somewhere and if you're a long time fan of Ray Stevens (as I happen to be) then you should already be well aware of "Silver Bracelet" from 1957. The single was issued on the Prep label, a subsidiary of Capitol Records, and it's the first single released on Ray Stevens...and at the time he happened to be 18 years old...and as his age at that time clearly shows he literally grew up in the music industry. He had single releases on Capitol and NRC over the next several years (1959-1960) and then he joined the Mercury label in 1961. It is at Mercury that the legend of Ray Stevens truly starts to form...establishing himself midway through the decade as one of the top session musicians, music arrangers, and writers on Music Row.
The 1962 hit, "Ahab the Arab", made Ray Stevens a star overnight...and it was followed by a series of novelty and love ballad releases on Mercury throughout 1962-1963 and into 1964. A unique contract arrangement allowed him to record and release music on the Mercury label while working as a session musician/producer/arranger for Monument Records. This is why his single releases for Mercury lasted into 1965, even though his name appears on countless single releases as writer or producer or arranger on Monument releases by other artists during the same time period. Ray's first Monument recording didn't hit the market until late in 1965. Although statistics show that his biggest hit for Monument was the million selling hit, "Gitarzan", in 1969...chart statistics belie Ray's true popularity. It's always seemed as if Ray pays more attention to the song, it's arrangement, the production in general...and he pays less attention to current trends or sure-fire radio material. You can argue that's the mark of a true artist when you do not allow popular trends, consumer whims, or radio consultants to influence everything you release.
Throughout the career of Ray Stevens there have been many single releases and album releases...and later on VHS and DVD releases...and even more later on the explosion of on-line music video content and the immediate reaction on social media sites. His music's been witness to practically every media imaginable. He won two Grammy awards: Best Male Pop Vocal Performance in 1970 for "Everything is Beautiful" and Best Musical Arrangement in 1975 for "Misty". The readers of Music City News magazine named Ray their Comedian of the Year for 9 consecutive years (1986-1994) in the annual fan voted awards ceremony.
Ray lent his time and talents to the various awards shows presented by Music City News magazine throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s. There was a time when Ray often hosted or co-hosted those very awards telecasts...usually he could be seen hosting or co-hosting the secondary awards program, Music City News Songwriters Awards. In that series of programs the focus was, of course, on the songwriters of the top country hits of a given year. In some cases where the artist happened to be the writer they'd attend the gala but most of the time the lead writer of a song (if it happened to be a collaborative effort) would perform the song on the telecast or the hosts would perform the songs up for nomination. In rare moments the recording artist that had a hit with a nominated song would appear and perform it...and my guess is this was done because either the writer or writers didn't want to perform their song on national television (stage fright) or the writer felt their voice wasn't good enough as the professional singer. One of Ray's recordings received a Top Comedy award at the Music City News Songwriters Awards in 1986...the 1984 recording of "Mississippi Squirrel Revival". The song's writers (Buddy Kalb and his wife, Carlene) received the plaque but Ray performed it on the telecast. The reason it picked up an honor in 1986 is because the single's release happened late in 1984 but it didn't become an immediate hit. It finally began to hit early in 1985 and by the time it reached it's Top-20 peak position on the Billboard Country chart it wasn't eligible, as far as I know, for nomination in the 1985 Songwriters Awards and so to the best of my knowledge that's why a song appearing on a 1984 album, which became a hit single in 1985, received an award in 1986.
I remember one such awards telecast in 1991 where Ray performed the George Strait number one hit, "You Know Me Better Than That". On that particular broadcast Ray was co-host with Jimmy Dean and Kathy Baillie. The trio made the cover of Music City News in 1991.
What is the only Ray Stevens studio album on Barnaby Records that has not been issued on CD or Mp3 format? Consider that a pop quiz question. The answer? 1973's studio album, Losin' Streak. That album, ironically enough, was released several months before a certain single in the spring of 1974 which captured a national fad at the peak of it's popularity. "The Streak" (a novelty song dealing with running around in the nude) streaked up the Hot 100 pop chart and much like a streaker in a mad dash "The Streak" hit the top of the Hot 100 in less than a month's time. The single reportedly sold in excess of five million copies worldwide. It was a massively popular song in the spring and early summer of 1974 all over the world pretty much. It hit the top spot on the pop chart for four weeks and in other charts internationally it hit the Top-10...on the country music chart it reached the Top-5. A novelty single in the truest sense of the word but in spite of all of it's success it was shut out come awards time regardless of it easily being the top selling single of the year. It was such a strong selling single in the United Kingdom that by the time the 1970's were coming to an end the music press over there named it the best selling novelty song of the decade.
A couple of days ago an interview of Ray Stevens conducted by Music Row magazine appeared on-line. I've not been having my computer on too much this week because of the unpredictable weather system that's passing through this area and usually I keep my computer shut down until storms pass or the weather generally gets better. Anyway...when I got onto the internet this morning and I discovered an interview posted January 22nd. You can read that article and interview by clicking HERE. Along the way you'll find out some breaking news concerning new music...but there isn't a time-line on when anything is to emerge. Ray specifically points out that he isn't going to space the projects out and that they'll all be released at the same time. I won't go into any further details here...you all will need to click the link and read more. I'm excited knowing that there is to be new music on the way...and if you're like me then you can't wait to hear everything once it becomes available!! If we venture back to the 'energizer bunny' description once more did you all see the photo of Ray seated at a table, with drink in hand, in front of the green screen? He's working on a music video for an upcoming comedy song...the song's title is referenced to in the link I provided above.
I've been a fan of Ray Stevens ever since the mid 1980s. As some of you that have stopped by this fan created blog over the last 10 years should probably know by now the very first recording from Ray that I heard was "Mississippi Squirrel Revival" on a jukebox in a pizza place in a nearby town. I have long since obtained practically everything that's been released commercially on Ray Stevens in a variety of formats (vinyl, cassette, CD, and Mp3). When I discovered Ray's music I was not quite yet a teenager...but being a fan of comedy it just seemed like a natural progression of mine to gravitate toward Ray's music. I grew up listening to country music and so I'm very familiar with country comedy and Hee Haw and so when I heard somebody singing and being comical all at the same time that's what drove me to become a fan of Ray's. Later on I became much more detailed and had something of an uncontrollable appetite for seeking out everything I could find from Ray Stevens. I was fortunate enough to have a grandfather that didn't mind parting with some of his money anytime I spotted something by Ray Stevens sitting in the music section of K-Mart just begging for my ears to hear. After I grew up and got a job I made up for lost time and searched out his entire back catalog of vinyl albums.
I posted the collage seen above recently. When my brother and I went to Nashville last year, in addition to going to Ray's CabaRay showroom, we also visited the Country Music Hall of Fame. I had my brother take a photo of me in front of an exhibit of Ray Stevens items on display. Ray isn't a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame but he's a member of other Halls of Fame (Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame; Georgia Music Hall of Fame; Atlanta Music Hall of Fame; and the Christian Music Hall of Fame). Anyway...I had my brother take that photo...and then I remembered the photo of Ray standing in front of the exhibit and so I decided to create a collage featuring the exhibit. Late last year Ray Stevens received a Star on Nashville's Walk of Fame. I wrote several blog entries leading up to the event as well as on the day of the event. I feel it appropriate to close out this Ray Stevens 80th birthday blog entry with a photo from that special day in his career...
Ray Stevens 2018 Walk of Fame |
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