One of the priceless items I have in my Ray Stevens collection is his memoir from 2014 which is titled Ray Stevens' Nashville. The memoir was released five years ago. I own a softcover version of the book and I purchased my copy in March of 2014. I wrote a review of the book on this blog and I copied and pasted it onto Amazon. I can't remember exactly what day the book arrived in the mail but the Amazon customer review is dated April 16, 2014. I also discovered that of the 33 customer reviews on Amazon only three of them are designated paperback (a/k/a: softcover). I wrote one of the paperback/softcover reviews while a couple of other customers provided reviews for that format as well. The remainder of the customer reviews are for the hardcover and Kindle formats. Is that something that's necessarily a tidbit of information that's
worthy of pointing out...probably not...but it's something that caught
my eye nevertheless. The softcover edition was released on Amazon on March 5, 2014. The Kindle version was released on March 17, 2014. The hardcover became available on Amazon on August 25, 2014. After the release of the memoir Ray went on a book signing tour...a lot of the appearances were inside shopping malls at chain book stores and were mainly confined to Tennessee as well as a couple of book stores in Kentucky as well as Southern Indiana. In my blog entries during the first half of 2014 I provided much more detailed information as to where Ray was signing copies of his book. One of the special moments occurred at the Nashville Public Library where Ralph Emery interviewed Ray about the memoir followed by a book signing. I did some research and found the exact day of that interview and it took place on a Sunday and the date was June 22, 2014. The Tennessean newspaper published an article (June 18, 2014) promoting Ray's memoir and the upcoming book signing at the library and near the end of the article the author remarked that Ray is pondering the idea of building a venue in West Nashville.
By the way you can read my Amazon review of Ray's memoir by clicking HERE.
Isn't it fascinating when you go back and read articles or interviews featuring the goings-on in the career of Ray Stevens and pick up on things in hindsight? For example...in my review of his memoir I misunderstood a passage in one section. I pointed out, in my review, that Ray remarked that Fred Foster never got the chance to produce recording sessions on him...and yet Fred is credited as a producer on two of the albums Ray recorded at Monument. My mistake is that Ray's comment was part of a dare but I completely misread that sentence. Fred had objected to issuing "Gitarzan" as a single believing it couldn't be a hit...but Ray countered Fred's skepticism by saying something along the lines of: "release it...and if it's not a hit you can produce the rest of my sessions from now on". Ray commented in the book that "Gitarzan" became an enormous hit single in practically every English-speaking country in the world and "so Fred never got the chance to produce me". When I originally read that line back in March/April of 2014 it always baffled me but months later I discovered that I simply misread what Ray was explaining but I left my review intact and didn't edit or change anything. Gitarzan, the album, was all-comedy and the production team consisted of Ray, Fred Foster, and Jim Malloy. Ray's follow-up album to Gitarzan arrived later on in 1969, also on Monument, and not surprisingly the production credits on Have a Little Talk with Myself show only Ray Stevens and Jim Malloy...due to Fred 'losing' the bet regarding the fate of "Gitarzan". Another example of picking up on things in hindsight is the remark in the 2014 Tennessean article about Ray pondering the idea of opening a venue in West Nashville.
At the time I was under the impression that he'd purchase an existing facility, remodel/restore it, and open it up as some sort of performance theater. Little did we know in 2014 that Ray would supervise from the ground up the construction of a sprawling performance venue on River Road in West Nashville which ultimately was given the name, CabaRay. Also, little did we know in 2014 that Ray was planning on hosting a music-driven television series which was originally titled Ray Stevens' Nashville (making it's television debut in November 2015).
When Ray and company thought the CabaRay would be opening in the latter half of 2017 they changed the name of the television show to Ray Stevens' CabaRay Nashville beginning in early January of that year. The showroom finally opened for business, however, in January 2018 after nearly a year and a half construction process. The building permit took months to receive...obviously delaying the original plans of when the venue was to open...from a late summer/early fall 2017 anticipation to the eventual January 2018 grand opening. The showroom holds 750 audience members in the main concert area. There's a gift shop as well and also not to be overlooked is his trophy case upstairs as well as the piano bar which can seat quite a few customers. He signs autographs in the piano bar after the concerts. It's also a dinner theater...those who select a dinner option are seated at tables and in booths on the main floor while balcony seating is for non-dinner customers.
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