May 11, 2019

Ray Stevens: Sing It...Hum It...Love It...

Hello all...I was going through the acres of archives here on my fan created Ray Stevens blog page and I was skimming through some of my blog titles from 2012. I was refreshing my memory as to what I was writing back then and that's the year I did a series of blog entries called The Golden LP series. The blog entries under that title spotlighted a different Ray Stevens album from every year beginning in 1962 up through the then-current year of 2012. That particular year happened to be the 50th anniversary of Ray's move to Nashville in 1962 and the eventual recording and release of "Ahab the Arab"...and so I decided to create a series of blog entries to honor that 50th year golden milestone. 2012 also marked the 15th anniversary of a particular Ray Stevens studio album titled Hum It which was released in early 1997 on MCA.

The comedy album features 10 recordings...two of which were turned into music videos: "Virgil and the Moonshot" and "Too Drunk To Fish". Those two songs, given their music video treatment, have become classics on the internet. When Ray and his associates created various social media pages (YouTube, specifically) those two music videos became just as viral as the earlier music videos from the 1992 Comedy Video Classics VHS (which had also been uploaded onto YouTube). Ray uploaded the 1997 music video of "Virgil and the Moonshot" onto YouTube in 2012 and since then it's received over 120,000 unique views. "Too Drunk to Fish", on the other hand, was uploaded onto YouTube the same year and it's gotten more than 2,000,000 unique views. Those were the only songs on Hum It that were turned into music videos even though several other songs would have made great music videos, too. "R.V." paints the picture of a couple seeing the country from the comforts of their brand new "R.V."...but things don't go as smoothly as they had hoped...look out for those overpasses!! The wonderful and clever "I'll Be In Atlanta" is so good...it has a catchy Dixieland sound playing along in the background as Ray sings about the part of the country where he was raised. Lyrical cleverness is abundant during the song where names and locales from the classic movie, Gone With the Wind, are mentioned. A couple more songs on Hum It could also have made good music videos: The album's closing number is very funny and satirical even though a lot of people may not relate to it personally. "How Much Does it Cost To Fly To Albuquerque?" is the fictional story of Ray calling up an airline and asking that simple question but the travel agent on the other end of the phone gives Ray a lot of grief and headache inquiring about all kinds of promotional coupons, inquiring if it's Coach, if a rental car is needed, how much luggage is expected, etc. even though all Ray was wanting to know is how much a ticket costs. "Mama Sang Bass" is a parody of "Daddy Sang Bass", a classic from Johnny Cash. Ray's recording, however, examines a role reversal and what might happen if Mama and Daddy both work at a pharmaceutical factory but over the course of time the two slowly experience emotional chaos based on where they've been assigned at the factory. In the song Mama works on body building steroids while Daddy helps manufacture birth control pills. Mama's been exposed to so many steroid fumes and chemicals while Daddy's been breathing in chemicals from birth control pills that it caused each other to change slightly...and now when they're in church Mama sings bass while Daddy sings tenor. It's hysterical...the famed bass, J.D. Sumner, sang the part of Mama...and I always wish it would have been made into a music video.

The ten songs on the album are: "R.V.", "I'll Be In Atlanta", "Virgil and the Moonshot", "She Loves Elvis Better Than Me", "Sunday Morning", "Too Drunk To Fish", "Mama Sang Bass", "My Neighbor", "It Ain't Over Till It's Over", "How Much Does It Cost to Fly to Albuquerque?".

Curb Records re-issued Hum It in 2009...peculiar given that the album had been recorded for MCA and previously released by them in 1997. It's a rare occurrence when a record label re-issues an album that had been recorded and previously released on another label...but yet that's what happened. The graphics and coloring were the only thing different between the 1997 and 2009 Hum It releases. The Curb release has a darker background with Ray's name and the album title underneath the photo. Ray is dressed as a basketball referee whistling in the photo...and he's dressed as Whistler's Mother...in the foreground. The idea behind the album's title was the mother tired of hearing her son 'whistling' all the time and for him to just Hum It instead. Ray explained the album cover during appearances on several television shows in 1997 which is how I know the backstory of the cover art. Ray explained the cover art in a lot of his television appearances and in interviews because a lot of people mistakenly thought he was dressed up as Norman's mother from the Psycho movies.

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