September 29, 2019

Ray Stevens: The Road to the Country Music Hall of Fame, Part Twenty-Two...

It's me once more!! In the last installment I made mention of several releases from Ray Stevens and in hindsight it all may have come across confusing or rushed. Well, more confusing than rushed, as I just finished reading bits and pieces of Part 21. The VHS you see off to the left was released in 2003 on Clyde Records. Greatest Video Hits is a compilation of music videos from Ray which made their debuts in the early and mid 1990s. The VHS contains 11 music videos altogether...the 11th is singled out as a bonus video, "Thank You". Ray appears as kind of an emcee on this VHS introducing each of the videos and often commenting on the song's inspiration/history. The set list includes seven of the eight music videos found on 1992's Comedy Video Classics, three music videos from 1995's Get Serious!, and the bonus video which was brand new in 2003, "Thank You". The VHS photo, as you can see off to the left, is Ray in performance of "It's Me Again, Margaret"; advertisements for this collection of music videos appeared in numerous publications (direct mail). Curb Records as well as Asylum Records joined forces and issued a CD single of "Thank You" backed with the very comical "When The Kids Are Gone" in 2003. You can sometimes find that promo CD single for sale on-line. The CD has "Thank You" as the second song on the disc...meant to be referred to as it's B-side...given Ray's reputation for comedy songs even though, in reality, "Thank You" was the song being pushed and talked about in his concerts and given the music video treatment. Ray co-wrote the song with Larry McCoy and in 2004 a studio album was issued on Clyde Records titled Thank You. The album's photo shows a painting of an eagle holding a banner that reads: Thank You!. The liner notes credit the illustration to an artist named John Sylvester. The lyrics to all of the songs are contained in a fold-out cover. Ray wrote or co-wrote eight of the eleven songs on the CD! It's one of his first albums in a number of years to contain largely self-written material.

This 2004 CD is chock full of, mostly, patriotic ballads centered around the events of 9/11 but there's also a number of love ballads added to the mix...enabling it to become Ray's first all-serious studio album since 1983. As if to slyly make reference to this fact Ray includes a re-recorded version of the love ballad with the comical title, "Love Will Beat Your Brains Out", which was originally found on his 1983 Me album (his final all-serious studio album until 2004's Thank You). Ray also updates his 1978 release, "Be Your Own Best Friend", for this 2004 album. Ray wrote/co-wrote the following songs found on this CD: "Thank You", "Come on Home to Baseball", "Blue Angel", "Let's Roll", "Be Your Own Best Friend", "Love Will Beat Your Brains Out", "When I Get Over You", and "Stand Up". The songs on the CD that he didn't write are: "Pledging My Love", "It Won't Be Easy", and the instrumental to close out the CD, "Boogie Woogie". A couple of months prior to the CD release of Thank You in July 2004 Ray had made a return to Branson, Missouri. He had taken back his theater following the closure of the country music production that had occupied the venue since 1994, titled Country Tonite. The re-opening of Ray's theater, after several months of re-decoration and aesthetic changes, occurred in May 2004. If I'm not mistaken it's at the theater where his recording of "Pledging My Love" from the Thank You album was recorded. There's a bagpipe solo heard in Ray's version of "Pledging My Love" credited in the liner notes to Jay Dawson. The "Thank You" song, by the way, is a salute to America's military...all branches. The inspiration for the song came from how the anti-war protestors and those that dislike the military have been allowed to taint the image of the military as some sort of barbaric gang of ruthless killers...enabled by a national news media all too eager to help conjure up that image...and so the song gives thanks to all branches of the military.

In 2005 Ray unleashed a 3-disc collection called Box Set. The project was not a career overview in the traditional sense. It included a lot of previously released songs...but most of the songs were re-recordings that he did for music video soundtracks in the 1990s during his Curb Records era...meaning that all of the most widely known songs appearing on this release were not the original recordings from the '60s, '70s, and '80s. The collection did feature a heavy dose of original recordings from his 1990s and early 2000s albums as well as exclusive recordings for the Box Set but signature songs like "Ahab the Arab", "Gitarzan", "The Streak", or "It's Me Again, Margaret" for example are recordings he did in the early 1990s. The exclusive songs at that time were: "Driver's Education", "Family Funeral Fight", "We're Havin' a Baby the Natural Way", "Kitty Cat's Revenge", and "The Cat Song"; both "Hello Mama" and "When the Kids Are Gone" appear on a full-length CD for the first time after each having only been available as CD single releases. In November of 2005 Ray closed down his Branson Missouri theater after a successful two season run.

The run of concerts had been a success but, as Ray pointed out more than a decade later, the times had changed since the early 1990s and the town had changed and become over populated with local talent and very few nationally known headliners...meaning that there wasn't a throng of tourists or bus tours bringing in people from all over the region given the small number of nationally known performers still performing there. Ray sold the theater to the RFD-TV company in 2006 and that organization staged a lot of performances there beginning in 2007. The cable channel has since sold the venue within the last couple of years and it's now under new ownership. It was after his wrap-up of concerts in Branson, Missouri that Ray, according to his memoir from a couple of years ago, contemplated retiring. He had shut down his fan club several years earlier (2002) after a 15 year run and had scaled back his television appearances as well as his time in the recording studio. In Part 20 I said that I'd make mention of Ray's self-administered thoughts of retiring in Part 21 but I got ahead of myself, obviously! The thoughts of retiring didn't begin to surface until 2006.

As a fan I could tell that he was slowing down and many times I myself wondered if he was ever going to release new recordings or new music videos. In my next installment I'll pick things up in 2006 as we march closer to 2009...a pivotal year in the career of Ray Stevens and one that shaped the direction of his career for the next several years...needless to say his thoughts of retirement were very short-lived, thankfully, as brand new music began surfacing...and more on this in Part Twenty-Three!!

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