October 27, 2019

Ray Stevens and the Week that Was...

Ray Stevens: 10-20-19
Has it been a week since Induction Day at the Country Music Hall of Fame? Well, yes, we're a week removed from the day that Ray Stevens, Brooks and Dunn, and Jerry Bradley officially became members of the Country Music Hall of Fame on October 20, 2019. I'm not going to literally recap every single moment of the past week but let me point out that it was a very busy week for each of the inductee's...a very busy lead-up to the inductions, as well. Ray, a busy artist himself regardless of the time of year, had to split his two-day charity golf tournament, which in time's past is scheduled on back-to-back days, by a week. The first round of the charity event took place on October 13th while the second round took place on October 21st. It was the fourth annual charity golf event. The golf game itself was at the Temple Hills Country Club. Video footage surfaced on his Facebook page of the charitable events taking place at Ray's CabaRay showroom on October 13th. In the video clip Ray mentions that the activities were scheduled on back-to-back days as in the past (October 20th and 21st) but this year, due to his formal induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame taking place on October 20th, they had to postpone day one of the event by a week and so those that shown up on the 13th expecting to play golf the next day, Ray remarked, were going to have to wait a week for the actual golf game on the 21st. In keeping with tradition the first day of the charity event takes place on a Sunday with the golf game itself taking place the next day but this time around, as mentioned, the auction and performance from Ray at his CabaRay took place a week ahead of the golf game. It's my guess that the golf course wasn't available on October 14th nor October 28th and so that's why the event this year was split in half by a week. In my last couple of blog entries I provided links and images of Ray from the Country Music Hall of Fame induction. In addition to the formal induction by Ralph Emery there were performances. I touched on this in those blog entries as well but a quick recap: Ricky Skaggs performed "Misty", The McCrary Sisters performed "Everything is Beautiful", while radio/television broadcaster Keith Bilbrey and country comedian, James Gregory, did a version of "The Streak".

Ray Stevens, Jerry Bradley, Ronnie Dunn, and Kix Brooks: 2019
In addition to all of the coverage of the Country Music Hall of Fame inductions Ray also balanced his time performing scheduled concerts at his CabaRay showroom as well as appearing as a guest on the Grand Ole Opry (October 23rd). I provided a recap of his performance in my previous blog entry...the one with the title making reference to his interview with the L.A. Times. On October 25th Ray uploaded the audio track of his 1986 recording, "Southern Air", due to it being the birth date of Minnie Pearl (October 25, 1912 - March 4, 1996). The recording featured a third country comic, Jerry Clower, in the role of the pilot...referred to in the song as Captain Clower. The video clip featured art work from the time period promoting "Southern Air"...the song reached the country chart in the final couple of month of 1986. It placed among the Top 100 songs based on Airplay but the sales enabled it to make an appearance on the Single Sales chart, a concurrent survey of country singles based entirely on sales. When it appeared on the Top-30 country Sales chart it was the only single on that list that wasn't simultaneously in the radio dominated country Top-40...with most of the songs on the Sales list already in the Top-20 or Top-10 portion of the Airplay chart. I point that out just because I think it's a perfect example of the subjective nature of airplay and how the sales popularity of a single, or an album, doesn't necessarily mean airplay will automatically follow. The art work looks as if it was illustrated by those that did the art work for Jerry Clower's 1983 album, Live at Cleburne, Texas but that's only my guess based on visual similarities of Clower's likeness on the 1983 album and the art work surrounding Ray's 1986 single.

Jerry Clower, Minnie Pearl, Ray Stevens: 1986
An autographed publicity photo from 1986 shows the three legends, in character, for "Southern Air". Ray's character speaks like the by-stander heard in "The Streak". I'll be embedding the audio clip for those that have never heard "Southern Air" before. I'm always amazed whenever I read social media reaction about previous Ray Stevens recordings that I, personally, consider classics of his career but yet have never been heard by a good percentage of people posting on social media sites. It's at that moment when I have to realize not everyone's a Ray Stevens nut/fanatic like myself and that not all of his fans choose to get nearly everything he's recorded. That fact is one of the foundations of this fan-created blog page...covering every aspect of Ray's career from the obscure to the well-known. There's a treasure chest full of Ray Stevens recordings out there yet to be discovered. "Southern Air" originally appeared on Ray's 1986 Top-20 album, Surely You Joust. That particular comedy album was heavy on the rural, southern humor style not only with "Southern Air" but also the tale of a rural couple appearing on "The People's Court", a southern man "Makin' the Best of a Bad Situation", a rural couple visiting a "Smoky Mountain Rattlesnake Retreat", a rural family on a "Camping Trip", and an overly anxious and viscous southern policeman, "Dudley Dorite of the Highway Patrol". Here is the "Southern Air" audio clip with art work...


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