Well, hello all of you fans of Ray Stevens!! I have a feeling you all have heard the news that Ray's two television programs have returned to the RFD-TV airwaves. I found out last weekend when the station aired episode three of Season Three (guest starring gospel artist Michael W. Smith). The cable channel had aired the first two episodes of Season Three in the middle part of December before abruptly removing both programs from their line-up. I speculated several reasons for it's sudden departure in one of my final blog entries of 2018 (the one I wrote on Christmas Day) but in that blog entry I kept an open mind and wondered if the cable channel would return either series, or both, to the line-up in 2019 and sure enough both Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville and Rayality TV made their return to the weekend prime-time line-up on RFD-TV last weekend (January 5th/January 6th) but I never made mention of this in my January 6th or January 8th blog posts because I wasn't too sure if either show had returned on a permanent basis or if it was another false alarm but it looks as if both programs will be part of the RFD-TV line-up for the foreseeable future given that I looked ahead to next weekend's schedule on their webpage and RFD has the fifth episode of Season Three (guest starring Rhonda Vincent) scheduled to air next Saturday night (January 19th)...and this will make three consecutive weekends that the cable channel will have aired the two programs...and so I'm cautiously optimistic that, as I mentioned, each show will be on the weekend line-up on RFD-TV for the foreseeable future with no abrupt removal. Last night's episode guest starred B.J. Thomas.
On January 10th several video clips were uploaded onto YouTube promoting Ray's return to the RFD-TV airwaves. One clip features Ray at the piano inside the CabaRay discussing each series and then there are several video clips that promote a specific episode of Rayality TV. The clip-filled Rayality series features not only a mixture of music videos and live performances but clips from various programs from his extensive library of video footage are also inserted...each episode has a recurring theme...if an episode is titled 'chickens', just as an example, then pretty much all of the clips shown will center around the subject matter of chickens. The first video clip is the one featuring Ray discussing both television programs...
There have been four video clips uploaded to promote the first four episodes of Raylity TV. Seen below is clip one and clip four...
In my previous blog entry I focused on the single release of "Gitarzan" and how last week marked the 50th anniversary of it's chart debut (hitting the weekly music charts on January 6, 1969). I remarked that at some point this year I'll be posting blog entries focusing on the Gitarzan album as well as his second studio album from 1969, Have a Little Talk with Myself. At the moment I'm going to focus on the single release of "Have a Little Talk with Myself". Ray wrote it and it became the title track of his second studio album of 1969...and Monument released it as a single in the latter half of the year and it entered the charts early in 1970. There isn't any video clip of Ray performing the song on camera from the era in which it was recorded but you can find audio clips on YouTube of the 1969 recording. He re-recorded the song more than 40 years later with a different arrangement, and in abbreviated form, for a medley titled "Have a Little Talk with Myself/Just a Little Talk with Jesus" on his Gospel Collection CD. An audio clip of that particular 2014 recording can also be found on YouTube. The song originally appeared on the country charts early in 1970 (his second entry on the country music charts following "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" late in 1969).
On the pop chart "Have a Little Talk with Myself", strangely enough, didn't crack the Hot 100 at all...it Bubbled Under the Hot 100...meaning that the single never managed to even make it past the promotional stage. The unique chart is an extension of the Hot 100: for example...if a single hits number one on the Bubbling Under chart but doesn't make it onto the Hot 100 then it's official chart position is number 101. The chart consists of songs that are speculated to become hits on the Hot 100, specifically, but there have been a lot of instances where singles appear on the Bubbling Under chart but then go on to have chart runs in other music formats (such as country, rhythm and blues, soul). "Have a Little Talk with Myself" peaked in the lower half of the Bubbling Under chart (it consisted of 35 positions at the time) and so it's pop music peak position would have a triple digit number because of it peaking on the Bubbling Under chart. In the country music market the single managed to make it into the Top 100 but it peaked outside of the radio heavy Top-40 rankings. If you search the internet you'll find that several recording artists have recorded the song...including the likes of Sammy Davis, Jr. (just to name the most notable) but there have been other recordings of the song. It's an inspirational song and therefore it's often found on the gospel albums released on Ray Stevens...there have only been three gospel albums recorded by Ray anyhow...the gospel songs from his Turn Your Radio On album (from 1972) are the ones that had been reissued several times by a variety of different record labels and on many compilation albums you're usually going to find "Have a Little Talk with Myself" and "Turn Your Radio On" featured in the track lists. The Have a Little Talk with Myself studio album has never been issued in CD or Mp3 format. You can listen to the songs from that album on YouTube...but as a fan I'd love to see the studio album get the CD reissue treatment complete with liner notes and perhaps personal recollections/quotes from Ray Stevens himself...one can always wish. Later on this year I'll highlight the studio album since it, like the Gitarzan album, both turn 50 this year.
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