September 14, 2019

Ray Stevens: The Road to the Country Music Hall of Fame, Part Fifteen...

Hello once more!! As we left off in Part Fourteen I made mention of Ray receiving his 11th and, to date, final Grammy nomination in the spring of 1988 for "Would Jesus Wear a Rolex?". The topical song was still on the minds of most...including an occasional mention in the commentary of radio legend, Paul Harvey. The topical nature of the televangelists soon gave way to the topicality of politics as things were heating up in the Cold War. Ray's first single of the year came with a music video...his second of his career...and it was "Surfin' U.S.S.R.". As you could imagine it was a song blending the California surf music culture with real world politics. The music video featured additional content not heard in the audio recording...specifically the opening routine where there's a news bulletin and Ray is heard mimicking Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev discussing a Naval incident near Malibu. The song pays a lot of homage to the sounds of the Beach Boys...with Ray vocally sounding as close to Mike Love as possible. The B-side takes on cable/satellite television which, at that time, was still pretty new to a wide audience. The song title, "Language, Nudity, Violence, and Sex", comes from the common disclaimers that show up in the description of programs that air on satellite television. In this performance Ray uses the southern exaggeration as he tells the story of how his wife and children are being corrupted by the uncensored movies and graphic imagery that paid subscriptions offer.

In the summer of 1988 MCA released Ray's album, I Never Made a Record I Didn't Like. The album's title is a twist on the phrase 'I never yet met a man I didn't like' by Will Rogers. On the album cover Ray is seen performing a rope trick in the style of Will Rogers. The album reached the middle half of the Country album chart. In June of 1988 Ray took home his third consecutive Comedian of the Year trophy from Music City News. Ray's album featured a heavy dose of satirical humor with a lot of emphasis on the bizarre. It brought back "Mama's in the Sky With Elvis", a song that originally appeared a year earlier on Greatest Hits, Volume Two. On the album it's sandwiched between "Language, Nudity, Violence, and Sex" and "The Booger Man". The latter is a funky, bluesy, harmonica heavy ode to all types of monsters, bogey men, and horror films. By song's end Ray and his girlfriend are alone at night in his car...where Ray's deliberately parked near the woods...and he tells her that she better snuggle up close due to "The Booger Man" out there on the prowl. I'd seen Ray perform this a couple of times on television...typically around the Halloween season. Side One of the album closes with a hysterical version of "Bad"...the song written and originally a worldwide hit for Michael Jackson. Ray arranged the song as a blend of rhythm and blues and classic country...with a fiddle sawing away against the urbane sounds of pop...and every so often Ray throws in some Michael Jackson phrasing which make the vocal performance even more hilarious. Now, in the fall of 1988 his next single shown up in the form of "The Day I Tried to Teach Charlene MacKenzie How To Drive". The song reached the Country charts (below the Top-40) and he performed it on the Hee Haw 20th Anniversary Special. It tells the story of Ray teaching a deaf woman how to drive and all the chaos that happens when he attempts to give her instructions and directions but her deafness creates obvious confusion and destruction along the way. One of the wrecks takes place in Clarkdale, Geogia (an in-joke referring to Ray's birthplace). The song was written by Buddy Kalb. It's B-side is "I Don't Need None of That".

The realm of the bizarre is visited even more so on "Blood and Suede" as Ray assumes the role of storyteller and in a hushed, somewhat gravelly vocal he tells of a car wreck on Mulholland Drive between a Mercedes Benz and a Porsche. The wreck happened as a result of a young rock and roll singer not paying attention while driving...his attention was taken by his listening to his own music...with the volume turned way up. The driver of the Mercedes was under the influence of Cabernet. It's a social commentary piece at it's core. There's a whistling heard during the intro and fade out to the song and it's similar to the familiar whistle you hear in the theme song to The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly. The album's closer is one of his greatest comical songs of the decade...where he sings all about the love, peace, and harmony...it's the "Old Hippie Class Reunion"...far out, man!! Ray performs the song as a couple of spaced out hippies...one speaks in a slow, mellow voice while the other has a gravelly, boisterous voice (the same used for Cactus Pete a year earlier on "The Ballad of Cactus Pete and Lefty"). The two speak of their wild parties and their affection for loud music...which has caused the gravelly voiced hippie to nearly lose his hearing...having to constantly ask the mellow hippie to repeat his words. Their love for smoking anything flammable plays a hilarious role in the song, too.

If you happened to have been introduced to Ray Stevens' music in the 1980s you no doubt witnessed the countless number of compilation albums that seemed to surface year after year after year by nearly every record label major and minor, domestic and foreign, and what this did was keep his music in print/available but what it also did was confuse a lot of people, too, trying to assemble their personal collections of his music. There are dozens of Ray Stevens albums generically titled Greatest Hits as well as The Best of Ray Stevens...and then there are those titled The Very Best of Ray Stevens...and of course there's the television album from 1987 called Get The Best of Ray Stevens. There are a number of compilation albums that were contractually released and those particular albums were under Ray's control...but nearly all of the other compilation albums had nothing to do with Ray beyond showcasing his music.

In this internet day and age I've seen commentary from people suggesting that all those compilation albums were released with Ray's knowledge and consent but the truth is more than fifty percent of those compilation albums were issued without his consent. Any record label wishing to issue a compilation album on an artist pays a licensing fee for every song they wish to release...that is, if the song was recorded for another record label...and so Ray's music had gotten licensed, re-licensed, re-re-licensed, etc. etc. In 1989 Mercury Records issued a compilation on Ray titled Ahab the Arab...and the same year they issued a very similar compilation titled Funny Man. The compilation albums shared the same letter font, album photo, and the exact track list of eight songs.

These are the two compilation albums that Mercury Records issued on Ray in 1989. Can you spot the differences? In the first image the photo of Ray is a little bit lighter. The second photo has Ray's suit a little bit brighter...the basic difference is the tinting of the photo and the album titles. This photo had originally appeared on a compilation album several years prior on an Independent label called Spot Records. The recordings on those two collections come from the early 1960s...which may confuse some if they look at the album cover. The image of Ray Stevens shown on the album cover is from more than two decades after those songs were recorded. Yes, I'll admit it, way back when I was just starting my Ray Stevens collection I seen Funny Man on the cassette tape rack at a local store. I had heard those songs on a cassette version of The Best of Ray Stevens that Mercury Records originally released on vinyl in 1970 but was then re-issued in cassette format in 1987. Anyway...when I seen Funny Man and seen the recordings and looked at the photo of Ray...I thought it was going to be a collection of re-recorded songs but as it turns out the recordings are all from the early 1960s. So, from personal experience, I know how misleading the photo can be on those compilation albums. Fortunately I learned quick and have long since grown used to seeing Ray from all time periods show up on compilation albums...regardless of whether the music featured matches the time frame of the photo used.

Well, anyway, Ray was successfully marketed as a country comedian throughout the middle of the 1980s but in 1989 he released his sixth album for MCA titled Beside Myself. He had filled his first five albums for the label with comedy, comedy, and more comedy but yet on this one he filled the first side of the album with serious songs and the second side with comedy. As the photo depicts: serious Ray is seated beside comical Ray. If you're keeping track the last studio album from Ray to feature ballads was Me in 1983. The album was yet another example of his incredible talents. The album kicks off with the appropriately titled "Your Bozo's Back Again". The music accompanying most of the serious recordings is pop/easy-listening. "Another Fine Mess" with it's heavy use of saxophone gives it a jazzy feel. A salute to legendary actor, John Wayne, takes center stage in track three's "Marion Michael Morrison". The sing-a-long "Butterfly Inside a Coupe De Ville" has to be one of the strangest song titles in history but it's a deep kind of song in a bouncy sort of way. The first side of the album closes with the patriotic show stopper, "There's a Star Spangled Banner", tells the fictional story of a P.O.W. in Beirut and his longing for freedom. The second side of the album kicks off with the only single release from the entire album...the tabloid-like "I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O.". The song became one of his popular songs...although it never reached the charts. When he performed it on stage he would have a U.F.O. hovering over the audience while pink aliens would run through the crowd and run up on the stage. Ray performed it on the 1989 edition of the Music City News awards and during the telecast he picked up his fourth consecutive Comedian of the Year honor. The B-side of the U.F.O. novelty was "I Used To Be Crazy" which allows Ray to demonstrate all kinds of vocal mimicry and lyrical mayhem. "Stuck on You" is a story song concerning the side effects of using instant wonder glue (a variation on Super Glue). The album also includes the cleverly titled "The Woogie Boogie". Beside Myself would also appear on the Country album chart...marking six albums in a row from Ray Stevens to make an appearance on Billboard's Country Album chart. His tenure on MCA Records represented one of the most commercially and critically successful periods in his lengthy career...but Beside Myself marked what appeared to be his final album for MCA Records but more about that in the coming installments of this Road to the Country Music Hall of Fame mini-blog series. In the meantime, though, Ray signed a new recording contract with Curb/Capitol Records in 1990. The label's first project on Ray arrived in the form of a compilation album, His All-Time Greatest Comic Hits. The album's photo shown Ray from 1984 in a publicity image for "It's Me Again, Margaret". The compilation album eventually was certified Gold by the RIAA. His first studio album for Curb/Capitol hit in the summer of 1990...and we will pick up from here in Part Sixteen!!

1 comment:

  1. Another great blog about our Ray!! Thank you, Jerry.

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