Hello one and all...in this particular blog entry I'm giving some spotlight to an album from Ray Stevens released in 1977. I'm doing so because of a recent video clip that surfaced on YouTube several days ago. I did a couple of blog entries centering around this album in the past...I think the last one I did was a couple of years ago (2017) when the album turned 40 but I'd have to consult the archive section off to the right hand side of the screen. In 1977 another music legend, Marty Robbins, hosted a syndicated television show called The Marty Robbins Spotlight. Ralph Emery was the announcer and each episode would focus on one or a couple of artists. The series consisted of 36 episodes in which Ray was the featured spotlight artist in one but he also had an appearance in the Chet Atkins episode as well. In that episode the two of them perform "Frog Kissing", a single that Ray published, produced, and arranged featuring Chet singing in addition to playing the guitar. The song itself was from the pen of Buddy Kalb. The episodes of Marty's series, based on my own assumption, were taped at some point in the first half of 1977 and perhaps into the summer months before they began airing in the fall and so Ray's album, Feel the Music, was widely available by the time his episode was airing.
The front of the album shows an illustration of a stereo speaker as a tie-in with the album's title. If you literally feel the music then you'll be placing your hand on an actual speaker...but, of course, the song itself has a much more deeper meaning. It's a motivational kind of song which says that you need to find purpose in life and live for yourself rather than living for other people...or, in other words, living a life in which everybody but your own self is happy. "Feel the Music" was issued as a single backed with "Dixie Hummingbird". There was also the usual promotional copy which featured "Feel the Music" on both the A and the B side. Strangely enough "Feel the Music" didn't reach the charts but then it's B-side was released as a single. "Dixie Hummingbird" received the promotional copy treatment but there wasn't a single released featuring it as an A-side. Instead, the record store employees went through and flipped "Feel the Music" over where "Dixie Hummingbird" was seen first by music consumers. The single releases didn't have an A or a B side designation anyhow. "Dixie Hummingbird", an outstanding performance, reached the middle pack of the country music chart...in that particular era the country singles chart matched the pop singles chart...each chart had 100 positions. It came oh so close to cracking the Top-40 of the country music chart. A third single from Feel the Music, "Get Crazy With Me", also reached the charts but it peaked in the lower half of the Top-100. Ironically it's B-side was none other than "Dixie Hummingbird". The back of the 1977 album features an image of Ray and the illustration of what the back of a stereo speaker looks like. The album was largely written by Ray with the exception of the Buddy Kalb composition, "Set the Children Free". The rest of the songs were all penned by Ray Stevens.
Buddy's songs didn't begin to feature prominently on Ray's albums until the mid 1980s onward. The first songwriter credit on a Ray Stevens album for Buddy Kalb was "One and Only You" on 1976's Just for the Record. The inclusion of "Set the Children Free" on 1977's Feel the Music means it's the second composition from Buddy Kalb to appear on one of Ray's albums. "Frog Kissing", the Chet Atkins hit with harmony vocals from Ray, didn't appear on any of Ray's albums but it marked a third Buddy Kalb penned song that Ray recorded in that 1976-1977 time frame.
A clip of Ray performing "Misty" on Marty's show was uploaded nearly a year ago (March 2018) and a couple days ago (February 13) the performance of "Feel the Music" was uploaded. The entire episode has never been uploaded onto YouTube but here's the most recent upload from the 1977 appearance on Marty's program...
Now then, even though the entire episode featuring Ray Stevens as the spotlight artist hasn't been uploaded onto YouTube as of this writing, the entire Chet Atkins episode (with a special guest appearance by Ray) is uploaded onto YouTube. A screen-cap from that appearance is below...
The Chet Atkins episode I'll embed further down the blog entry and the only reason I'm embedding the entire episode is because there isn't a video clip of Ray and Chet's performance from that episode. Ray and Chet would perform the song together several years later, in 1980, as part of an all-star salute to Chet's career. In that performance Ray was seated at the piano and by then had grown his recognizable facial hair...in other words he had become bearded...but the 1980 performance is just as good as the 1977 performance. The earlier performance, in comparison, comes off more lively and a lot of that has to do with the fact that the song was less than a year old when they performed it on Marty's show so by the time 1980 rolled around, with the song now going on four years old, it was still entertaining due to it featuring the novelty aspect of Mister Guitar singing.
Now, getting back to Ray's spotlight episode, I know you're all probably wanting to see the performance of "Misty" as well...and if so you can watch that performance below. In case you never seen this video clip before (it's been on YouTube for a year) it starts out with Ray and Marty in discussion and then there's a brief sketch involving a saxophone player and a violinist in which Ray interrupts with his comically exaggerated Austrian/German accent. I think the violinist is Lisa Silver. Afterward the camera returns to Ray and Marty discussing and laughing over what they just saw and eventually Ray performs "Misty"...
Now, here's the Chet Atkins episode in it's entirety. Ray Stevens makes his appearance 18 minutes into the show (actual time stamp showing 17 minutes, 53 seconds). Ray is introduced as "your average man on the street" (although you can hear the audience laugh and applaud when Ray's face appears on the video screen) but the brief routine continues as "the average man" is asked by Marty what he thinks of Chet being a singer. After some jokes at Chet's expense Marty officially introduces Ray and this leads into the "Frog Kissing" performance...
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