March 25, 2019

Ray Stevens: Country Music Hall of Fame Press Coverage Synopsis...

It's me once more...and ever since the news was released regarding the 2019 inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame on March 18th there has, obviously, been all kinds of publicity and on-line articles and essays spring up after the announcement was delivered. Some of the commentary was great while other commentary not so great. I shared some links to articles surrounding the Hall of Fame announcement in several blog entries last week but I've decided to consolidate the links and list them one by one in this blog entry. I'm only going to spotlight maybe less than a handful.

Taste of Country

Music Mayhem Magazine

The Tennessean

UPI

Those are just four of the many on-line articles that appeared Monday afternoon and throughout the next couple of days after the Country Music Hall of Fame revealed it's newest members. There are plenty of other on-line stories that recycle the official press release and so I attempted to provide four on-line articles that provide something different in each one. The link to The Tennessean, for example, provides commentary from Ray on his amazement of being elected and how he never felt it would ever happen considering he had never been tied to any specific music format. In many of the bio's of Ray that have circulated for decades in magazines and now on the internet it describes him in various ways...the most descriptive being that he's a country-pop singer-songwriter-musician-music arranger-comedian-publisher-real estate mogul.

In spite of his reflective commentary found in The Tennessean he nevertheless considers his election to the Country Music Hall of Fame as his crowning achievement. If we're looking at it from a comedy perspective he joins a group of country comedians that were made members of the Country Music Hall of Fame years ago...and they, for the most part, were stand-up comedians who gained popularity on country music radio and television shows of the 1940s and 1950s.

Ray joins the likes of Minnie Pearl (elected in 1975), Grandpa Jones (elected in 1978), Little Jimmie Dickens (elected in 1983), Benjamin 'Whitey' Ford a/k/a The Duke of Paducah (elected in 1986), and Bill Carlisle (elected in 2002) as Country Music Hall of Fame members that are largely known more for their comical contributions within country music.  

Ray is also a music video personality as well as a television personality. He hosted a 1970 summer television show for Andy Williams which aired on the NBC Network. In 2015 he began a series called Ray Stevens Nashville which was re-titled Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville in 2017. The series originally aired on RFD-TV and then it moved to local PBS syndication in 2017. A couple of months ago the series returned to RFD-TV but it also continues to air in local PBS syndication. The television series is half an hour and it's a hybrid combining elements of a traditional talk-show (Ray's piano unofficially acts as his desk) and it's a music performance show. As of this writing there are 78 episodes of the series. I hope he puts together some more episodes even though 78 half hour episodes is a good sized amount of programs.

Now is probably a good time to give a synopsis of his association with Branson, Missouri and his eventual decision to build his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville...

In the early 1990s he owned and operated The Ray Stevens Theatre in Branson, Missouri. The venue opened in 1991 and for three consecutive seasons (1991, 1992, and 1993) he performed what he considered a grueling schedule. He shut down the theater following the 1993 season of concerts citing exhaustion. His schedule at that time was 6 days a week, 2 shows a day 9 or 10 months per calendar year. He returned to Branson in 1996 for a series of concerts at The Wayne Newton Theater. In the meantime Ray's venue was sold in 1993 but eventually he returned...in 2003 he bought the venue from the people who had been operating it since 1994...he had the interior remodeled slightly and added other aesthetic changes and in 2005 The Ray Stevens Theatre was back in business down in Branson, Missouri.

Ray worked a much more lighter schedule the second time around, too. Ray performed at the re-opened venue during 2005 and 2006...after which he sold the theater to RFD-TV and they still own it to this day. They call it RFD-TV: The Theater. Ray made another return to Branson in 2010 for a series of concerts at The Welk Theatre. To date that is the last time he performed an extended series of concerts in Branson, Missouri. In 2012 he returned to Branson for a series of special memorial concerts at The Moon River Theater following the passing away of Andy Williams.

In March 2016 ground was broke in West Nashville in the community of Bellevue. The project getting underway was the construction of the CabaRay Showroom. The venue's construction was delayed nearly half a year due to red tape and behind the scenes matters regarding zoning and the building permit application. The showroom, originally, was on a timeline to be open to the public a year from then in March 2017. However, due to the delays, actual construction of the showroom didn't begin until early fall of 2016 (September to be specific). This pushed the desired timeline of it's grand opening from early 2017 to perhaps the Christmas season of 2017.

The CabaRay at long last had it's grand opening in January of 2018. Ray is currently in his second season of concerts at the CabaRay. His schedule consists of concerts on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings which will eventually be reduced down to Friday and Saturday evenings. During Christmas season last year he expanded the concerts to include select Thursday night performances...I assume he'll be doing this same thing when we approach the 2019 Christmas season.

For all things CabaRay visit the website by clicking HERE.

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