May 12, 2019

Ray Stevens: DVD at 15...

Later this year (September) will mark the 15th anniversary of a DVD titled The Complete Comedy Video Collection. This familiar DVD originally surfaced in 2004 on Clyde Records...by familiar I'm referring to the fact that it appears in search results for Ray Stevens image searches given how widely distributed the product happens to be all over the internet.

The original release on Clyde Records from 2004 had this information on the back of the DVD case. The first disc featured the music videos from a previously released 2003 VHS, Greatest Video Hits. As a bonus music video on disc one there's "Thank You", a newly released music video at the time. This was a number of years before the launch/creation of the video hosting site, YouTube, and this collection was the only place to see that particular music video. Disc two featured the music videos that appeared on Funniest Video Characters, a VHS release from 2000. The bonus music video on disc two is "Hello Mama", a sequel to "Osama Yo' Mama". In my previous blog entry I listed some comedy songs about mothers since this is Mother's Day but I never mentioned those two songs because in my way of thinking the subject matter is on a dramatically different emotional level but then again I should have listed those two songs anyway because they're definitely about a mother...albeit a fictionalized interpretation...but getting back to the theme of this blog entry the Clyde Records release of The Complete Comedy Video Collection in 2004 contains 20 music videos if you count both parts of "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone" on disc two. Funniest Video Characters opens with part one of the song and it closes with part two of the song. In between those music videos are six additional videos as you can see in the photo above. The photo that appears on Funniest Video Characters has Ray, in character, battling The Blue Cyclone (played by Buddy Kalb). In the blog archives you can find an earlier blog post where I single out a lot of the VHS and DVD releases from Ray of his music videos. In a blog post from July 14, 2011 titled 'Comedy Video King' I examine the music video projects. You can search the archives for that blog entry or simply Google 'Ray Stevens Comedy Video King' and it'll be among the first batch of search results.

If you look closely above the bar code you'll see a courtesy given to Curb Records. Although Clyde Records is a label owned by Ray he was technically signed to Curb Records in the early to mid 2000s where he released a couple of CD's and several music video DVDs before exiting the label at some point in 2006. Curb Records distributed The Complete Comedy Video Collection DVD to retail stores and a wide variety of on-line shopping stores. The art work, graphics, and other aesthetic aspects of the DVD remained the same during the Curb Records distribution of the title but there were a couple of subtle differences on the back of the DVD.

As you can see, the information on the back of the Curb Records version of the DVD doesn't mention that the music video selections are from a couple of previously released VHS projects. Also of note, on disc one "Santa Claus is Watching You", which had appeared on the Clyde Records release, is replaced on the Curb Records release with "Power Tools". I'm guessing the reason for that is the fact that Ray originally recorded "Power Tools" for Curb Records in 1991 and so it more or less made sense to include it as something of an exclusive to the Curb Records version of the DVD. On disc two there's an additional bonus music video. Originally "Hello Mama" was the only bonus music video on disc two but "Osama Yo' Mama" was added as extra bonus music video for the Curb Records release. The front of the DVD contains a photo of Ray in a red suit and here's some trivia: the origin of the photo dates back several years prior to the release of this DVD in 2004. If you remember a publication called Country Music Magazine there used to be a feature in each issue called 20 Questions. The magazine was informative and featured plenty of photos and interviews and essays/opinions from the writing staff. It wasn't what you'd call a fan-friendly publication and as a result you could find yourself at odds with some of the editorials and opinions (as I sometimes did). Anyway, Ray Stevens was given the 20 Questions spotlight in one of their issues and the photo of Ray that they used is the same one that graces the cover of The Complete Comedy Video Collection. I did some on-line searching since I don't have the issue with me at the moment (it's in a storage room at my grandparent's house) but I wanted to provide information on that particular issue and it's the May/June 1997 issue of Country Music Magazine. The artist on the cover of that issue is Patty Loveless.


The title of this DVD has inadvertently led to a lot of on-line confusion and a lot of it stems from poor research on the part of many who routinely offer this product for sale on various on-line stores. Amazon, for example, offers the Curb Records version of the 2004 DVD but in the consumer/customer review area quite a lot of people have complained that they received items not matching the product page. The confusion also stems from a similarly named DVD released in the United Kingdom in 2009 titled The Complete Comedy Collection and so that particular release is 10 years old this year. Amazon also has a habit of consolidating customer reviews and because both of these DVD releases have similar titles and the fact that Clyde Records as well as Curb Records issued versions of The Complete Comedy Video Collection it's created, as you could guess, one big messy scenario of customer comments where some customers refer to "Power Tools" being on the DVD when they were expecting "Santa Claus is Watching You" or some other customer thinking "Osama Yo' Mama" would be a bonus video but the copy they received didn't feature it. I don't own the 2009 release because I've always figured that it's not playable on American made DVD players. The coding on the discs is PAL format and even though the product page on Amazon states that it's playable in All Regions I've never had the desire to purchase it given how limited my knowledge is when it comes to DVD playback. I don't even know if the DVD player I have is multi-region or not...I'd like to own the UK project because I like the graphics/art work. This is the back of the UK released DVD...

The 2009 DVD features 15 music videos at random. Some of the music videos are animation only...those particular videos come from the pair of projects he released on Curb Records in the mid 2000s of limited animation music videos. The titles of those DVD releases were Gourmet Restaurant and Teenage Mutant Kung Fu Chickens. As you can see they used the photo of Ray from the 2004 DVD on the back of the 2009 DVD. This Complete Comedy Collection project wasn't released on Clyde Records as it was strictly a UK originated release but yet there's a Clyde Records logo further down the back cover of the DVD case. I didn't include the bottom half of the DVD but you can do an image search for the collection if you're curious to see the technical information (year of release, label, manufacturer, etc.). There's an image of the globe with a large Zero in the center. I looked up that image and it refers to the DVD being Region Free. That led me to look up what Region Free means. Supposedly it means the discs can be played in any DVD player all over the world...but I'm still skeptical. Anyway, the main reason I decided to use a smaller image is because I prefer not to take up a lot of text space on my blog entries with images. Some bloggers, and I was guilty of this when I first started blogging in 2008, choose to display large and in some cases super large images on their blogs and for the reader it pushes the text of the blog off to the side of the page...the results look aesthetically poor to me...and so I almost always choose to post medium or smaller sized images to eliminate any sort of major interference with the text. I do the same thing with video embeds. I reduce the original size of the videos so they don't interfere with the overall look of the blog entry. If you look at some of my very early blog entries you'll see how I didn't properly snip and crop images or reduce the size of videos and the results show. I'm not going to edit those posts to correct their visual appearance, though. I've come across blogs over the years in which the blogger hadn't resized the video...simply copied and pasted the default embed code...and the video took up most of the blog space leaving little room for much of anything else. Large photos and large video embeds also interfere with the loading of the page, too.

Some computers load faster than others...and for those on slower loading computers the appearance of any great big photo or video embed is a nightmare for them because of a slower webpage load time. I used to be on a device called Web-TV, on dial-up no less, and so I know what it was like to try and surf the internet and the slow load time whenever a page contained large graphics and videos. I got on-line via a Web-TV back in 2002...graduated to a desktop computer a couple of years later...then graduated to this laptop computer I'm on now. Oh, I still don't own a Blu-Ray player nor do I use what they call an I-phone or I-tablet or smart phone (assuming those are completely different things).

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