Ray Stevens 1970 |
As you can see this single's picture sleeve for "Turn Your Radio On", a late 1971 release, features it as the A-side but uses a recording from a previously released album as it's B-side. "Loving You on Paper" comes from Ray's studio album, Unreal, released in the latter half of 1970. That particular album also features "Come Around", "Monkey See, Monkey Do", "America, Communicate With Me", "Sunset Strip", "Dream Girl", "Talking", and others. This wasn't anything uncommon, though. If a single is released well before the completion of it's parent album then a previously recorded song will be placed on the B-side. This was the case for all three of the gospel single releases from Ray in 1971. His first release, "A Mama and a Papa", featured as it's B-side one of his most obscure recordings, "Melt". The song has never appeared on any studio or compilation album. It's audio track can be heard on-line for those aware of it's existence but by and large it's a song that only the most devoted of fans are familiar with. His second gospel single, "All My Trials", is a masterpiece of over-dubbing/multi-tracking and as it's B-side is a recording from 1969, "Have a Little Talk With Myself". This brings us to his third gospel single, "Turn Your Radio On", backed with "Loving You On Paper". All of those single releases became available long before the album, Turn Your Radio On, was released in 1972. The irony being that once the album became available the company didn't promote the fourth single release not nearly as much as they had the previous three. The rock-inflected arrangement of the fourth single, "Love Lifted Me", actually became something of a commercial hit in the country of Bangkok. It placed among that country's Top-40 and was charted for several weeks but it never reached the charts anywhere else. The single was actually among the Top-10 hits in Bangkok for the week ending September 30, 1972. I discovered this bit of trivia when I did a Google search for vintage issues of Billboard magazine more than 10 years ago. In the September 30, 1972 issue it has "Love Lifted Me" by Ray Stevens listed in the Top-10 in Bangkok. It's on the page that's titled Hits of the World. "Love Lifted Me" had a release with two different B-side recordings, though. In the United Kingdom the B-side was "Glory Special" while in America the B-side was "Monkey See, Monkey Do".
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