May 20, 2019

Ray Stevens: Flashback 2015...

I've decided to try out a series of flashback blog entries. I don't necessarily think it's considered repeating yourself because the commentary/opinions you'll be reading reflect my thoughts at the time of the writing...so it's not as if I'm copying/pasting past blog entry content and passing it off as new. In this experiment I've picked the year 2015. I pick that year because it's a pivotal year...a turning point in the career of Ray Stevens even though, like many other moments in his career, you don't notice it being a turning point until you're a couple years removed from it happening. Ray is the only recording artist that I can think of that can have multiple twists and turns in a career at any given moment and have it not negatively impact his career whatsoever or have it define his career.

Early in 2015 Ray released a comedy album, Here We Go Again!. This comedy album remains, to date, his last secular release. He issued a Christmas album in 2016 titled Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me and then, in 2017, he released Just a Closer Walk With Thee/Gospel Favorites, a sequel to 2014's Gospel Collection, Volume One but Here We Go Again! remains his last album of mostly original songs. I say mostly original because the 2015 album included a couple of cover songs and the inclusion of a recording from 2010. As mentioned in the above paragraph this flashback experimental series of blog entries isn't going to copy/paste commentary I've made in the past. If anything I hope to pick up on things I may not have noticed or didn't think to comment on at the time.

Here We Go Again! contains 12 recordings of various styles. To be sure it's a comedy album...but there are a number of songs that channel early rock music as well as rhythm and blues. The album was released early in March of 2015...where it had followed the on-line release of a music video on YouTube from Ray on February 24th. It was a little out of the norm for Ray to issue a music video and then more or less a week later have the album it's on become available for purchase...usually there's a waiting period of several weeks between a lead-off single (in this case a lead-off music video) and the release of the album. Nevertheless the lead-off release from Here We Go Again! arrived in music video form on YouTube in the name of "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me". Ray co-wrote the song with Buddy Kalb and Chuck Redden and as you could guess the music video became a viral hit and, again, as you could guess, a lot of that had to do with the video's subject matter being Taylor Swift. The song/video came at a time when she was everywhere...country radio, pop radio, country music television, MTV, VH-1, magazine covers that catered to various music formats, etc. etc. and at the same time there were a lot of really bizarre stories popping up on-line of people thinking that they were being stalked by the singer. The utterly bizarre nature of such claims goes hand-in-hand with Ray's song. There's a twist ending to the story but you'll have to wait until near the end of the song to hear it.

On the back of the CD you'll see the track list written on a mock-up of an airline arrival board. The front of the CD, above, has Ray at an airport setting in front of a Limo...with a gorilla being the chauffeur. If you look in the background you'll see a trailer of a semi truck with Clyde Van Lines written on it above the Clyde Records logo. The irony is this CD was released on Player Records which I'm assuming served as an in-house label and I don't think the Player imprint appeared on any further releases from Ray. There's a mini fold-out booklet contained within the CD sleeve. The booklet features a photo of Ray and his comments surrounding the CD and there's lyrics printed for all of the songs, too. "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me" continues to attract unique views but a recent statistical search shows that it's gotten more than 2.3 million unique views. Included on this CD is another song Ray co-wrote with Buddy Kalb and Chuck Redden. The trio wrote "You Didn't Build That" and it became a music video on YouTube, ironically enough, four years ago yesterday: May 19, 2015. That particular music video's gotten a little over 300,000 unique views. The CD also features, as mentioned earlier, a song from 2010 titled "Come to the USA". On the album it follows "You Didn't Build That". Elsewhere on the album there's his cover of "Hearts Made of Stone" which I had to look up back in 2015 because Ray sings it against a background reminiscent of the 1950s. I had initially thought that Ray performed the song like that on purpose and that it was a new song but then I thought that maybe it's a cover song. Ray does his version of "What'd I Say", a classic originally recorded by one of Ray's music heroes, Ray Charles. "There Must Be a Pill For This" was written by Don Cusic and that's a name that's become associated with Ray over the last 5+ years. Don helped put together the 2012 9-CD project, The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music, and he later supplied Ray with a couple of original gospel songs: 2014's "If Jesus is a Stranger" and 2017's "Just a Touch of Jesus". The latter co-written with Buddy Kalb. You can purchase the 2015 album, as well as most of the music Ray has issued over the last 10 to 15 years, at his web-store. Here's the product page for the 2015 ALBUM.

In addition to this comedy album in 2015 and the two music video hits that emerged from it the biggest and some might say shocking and unexpected news of the year came in the late summer/early fall of 2015. It was around the late summer time frame that on-line reports began to show up revolving around Ray's plans of becoming a television talk show host. The episodes of this as yet to be announced series had already been recorded weeks in advance and so on November 7, 2015 the debut episode of Ray Stevens' Nashville aired on RFD-TV with Steve Wariner as the special guest. In the first and second seasons of the show there was a segment featuring Don Cusic dressed in a graduate's gown, referred to as Professor Cusic: Doctor of Music, giving historical information about an upcoming song Ray was to perform. A lot of the information was tied into the mini-book he wrote for Ray's 2012 encyclopedia box set. Don happens to be a real college professor and so it was like art imitating life. The television series became a popular show on RFD-TV throughout 2016. The popularity led to more episodes being produced throughout the year. In total 26 first-run episodes and a Christmas themed episode aired between November 7, 2015 and December 31, 2016. This time frame also included the repeat cycle of all 27 episodes. In fact, RFD-TV aired a marathon of episodes as special programming on New Year's Eve.

The show had reportedly become the top rated series on the cable network but upon concluding it's repeat cycle Ray announced that the series was departing RFD for local PBS syndication. 52 first run episodes aired in local PBS syndication beginning in July of 2017 (following a repeat period of the 26 episodes originally shown on RFD). Those repeats were airing in the first half of 2017 on local PBS stations. The first-run PBS exclusives began on July 7, 2017 and the last first-run episode aired the weekend of July 6, 2018. By this time the name of the series had changed to Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. The change in name happened in January 2017 when the show began airing on PBS. The show continues airing all over the country on local PBS stations and in December 2018 it returned to the RFD airwaves, too, in it's former time-slot on Saturday nights. Ever since the debut of his television program in the latter half of 2015 and continuing on with the 2018 opening of his showroom, CabaRay, Ray's career has gone through various twists and turns that nobody would have expected at the beginning of 2015 when "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me" and Here We Go Again! made their debuts. 

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