April 8, 2019

Ray Stevens and That Nashville Music...

Two blog entries in the same day...oh yes...sometimes I may do such a thing! In my previous blog entry I wrote about Ray Stevens and his promotional video clip for It's Starts with M.E. which you can find in the April 2019 archives off to the right hand side of the page.

Yesterday evening featured a Ray Stevens mini-bonanza on RFD-TV. It began at 7:30pm Eastern with the airing of That Nashville Music and this was followed by Hee Haw at 8pm. In the Hee Haw episode Ray Stevens guest starred and sang "Shriner's Convention" and "Love Me Longer". This episode originally aired on February 16, 1980 with footage taped in the fall of 1979. The episode had previously aired on RFD-TV last year and it's been uploaded onto YouTube numerous times. It's the first of two appearances by Ray Stevens on Hee Haw in 1980. The second 1980 appearance recently aired for the first time on RFD-TV (February 24, 2019) in which Ray sang "You've Got the Music Inside" and "Night Games". This footage was taped at some point during the summer 1980 taping session and originally aired on October 11, 1980. Preceding the Hee Haw episode last night was That Nashville Music. This was a syndicated country music series that aired for 15 years (1970-1985). On-line information regarding the guests and air-dates is scarce to non-existent but I know Ray made appearances on the show throughout it's lifespan...and last night an episode from 1981 aired on RFD-TV. The series originally began under the title That Good Ol' Nashville Music and was hosted by Dave Dudley. Eventually the series featured a different guest artist each week in the informal role as host/presenter. The episodes were taped at the Grand Ole Opry House and in the episode I seen the off-screen announcer was the legendary Opry announcer, T. Tommy Cutrer. Ray opened the show with "You've Got the Music Inside", performed in the manner in which he had been performing it in his concerts and on television shows of this time period: a blend of uptempo and ballad. The recording of the song, which Ray issued twice (1973 and 1978), were recorded as slow ballads...but Ray obviously decided that the song needed uptempo elements sprinkled throughout so it wouldn't be too long of a ballad for live performances. He performed this arrangement of the song on Pop! Goes the Country, which is where I first seen it, prior to the performances on Hee Haw and That Nashville Music.

Reba McEntire and Leon Everette were the other two performers on the 1981 episode of That Nashville Music. Reba wasn't considered a newcomer in 1981 and yet she wasn't the super-star she became just a short couple of years later. She became a super-star after she joined MCA. As a result of her being a well established recording artist in 1981 she performed two songs: "How Does it Feel to be Free?" and "Today All Over Again" with harmony vocals from her sister, Susi McEntire (during her lengthy career as a Contemporary Christian artist she went by the name of Susi Luchsinger). Although Reba and Leon began tasting fame in the mid and late '70s, Reba was placing singles on the Country Top-40 consistently by the time of this 1981 television appearance. Anyway...

Leon Everette appeared in the segment following Reba's first performance and his segment baffled me. He's wearing the unzipped black jacket from the cover photo of one of his albums, Hurricane, plus he's wearing a cowboy hat for the performance. The thing that's baffling to me is the actual name of the song. He makes numerous mentions of roses and within the performance he states the phrase "Raining on the Roses" a couple of times during what appears to be song's chorus and so I'm assuming "Raining on the Roses" to be the name of this song...but yet no song with that title appears on any of the studio albums released on Leon Everette during the years of 1977 through 1981. I've already looked up his studio albums on eBay and gone over the track lists of those albums. Unless this song appeared on some obscure collection of songs that hasn't appeared on-line yet, was never recorded but only performed for this appearance, or whether I've got the song's title wrong hopefully someone out there will have some recall of the recording I'm baffled over. Now, when I was watching Leon's stage presence, he reminded me of Conway Twitty and Gene Watson...not vocally, of course, but the manner in which those two presented themselves on stage seemed to have heavily influenced Leon's performing style.

Leon, at the time, was a label mate of Ray. The two were on the RCA roster in 1981. Reba, on the other hand, had been on Mercury for a number of years...Jerry Kennedy would produce a lot of her earlier recordings...and eventually she would have Norro Wilson as a producer for several of her recordings...and those two men were a couple of legendary figures with connections to Ray Stevens.

Ray sang "Marie" prior to Reba's second performance...mentioning Randy Newman as it's writer. I'd never heard the song before and so this performance from Ray was brand new to me. As mentioned, Reba and Susi performed "Today All Over Again", and this was followed by a brief clogging routine. Ray closed the show with a song whose title is, I think, "Everybody is a Clown Inside", which I've not been able to find any information about. One of the band members dressed up as a hobo clown (in the tradition of Emmett Kelly) and pantomimed/acted to Ray's performance.

As far as Ray's attire...for those that like to know these things...when he opened the show he was seated at the piano. The button-up shirt he was wearing was sort of light blue...it had some embroidery on it similar to the design that appears on the black shirt he's wearing on the 1983 Greatest Hits album on RCA. The remainder of the episode featured Ray wearing a brown jacket/suit...it might be the same one worn during an appearance he made on Barbara Mandrell's television show in 1981. As of this writing the 1981 episode of That Nashville Music hasn't been uploaded onto any social media video page and so I'm not able to embed the episode. A video of the episode exists on RFD-TV's subscription service, Country Club, though. You can visit that page by clicking HERE.

1 comment:

  1. Just uploaded, the 1981 Performances of Ray on That Nashville Music https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Quw1bOezd5c&feature=youtu.be

    Randall Hamm "Big Fan of Rays"

    ReplyDelete

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