October 13, 2019

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

Is it a mere week before the official inductions of the Class of 2019 into the Country Music Hall of Fame?? Oh yes...official inductions take place on October 20th...seven days from now!! The years discussed in this installment feel like a blur to me because they're so recent yet when you do the math it's within the last four years. In my previous installment I hinted at the activity ready to take place in the latter half of 2015...four years ago...time flies...

Ray had been taping episodes of an as yet to air television series in the late summer of 2015. When word was released that the shows were in the process of being taped and tickets were made available to the taping sessions I didn't know what to make of it because Ray had attempted television programs in the past...a pilot in 1992 titled Amazing Rolling Revue ended up being issued on VHS. In the next decade and a half he created a couple of other television series that played on digital television when that format was in it's infancy and then those subsequent shows were transferred as on-line only exclusives before eventually going out of production. This as yet to be named 2015 series was different in that it would play like a talk-show/music program and include special guests and an intimate, small audience. The satellite/cable channel, RFD-TV, would air this series. The program came into being the night of November 7, 2015 as Ray Stevens' Nashville...the name of his memoir. The show's first guest was Steve Wariner. The program ran half an hour and it combined the elements of a talk show with a music-driven show.

The first episode set the pattern for the rest of the episodes in that Ray opens the show with a performance of a song he's either recorded or a song he likes that someone else has recorded...then makes his way over to his red piano (which acts as his 'desk') and then introduces the special guest. Ray sometimes provides a brief overview of the guests' accomplishments...the guest walks out and sits on a chair or a stool next to the piano...almost always a stool...and then engages in the conversation/interview prior to performing their song. Upon the conclusion of the interview segment the guest will perform a song or sometimes a medley of songs...and then Ray will insert a vintage music video or performance video of himself in what's called The Video Jukebox. There was also a segment called The Ray Stevens Comedy Theater which was mostly sketches he'd taped at some point in his career. Don Cusic was on hand as Professor of Music. In his sketch he sat at a table in graduate attire and provided introduction/information about a novelty song from Ray's 2012 Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music prior to Ray's performance of the song. If Ray closed a show with something other than what's in the 9-CD Encyclopedia box set then the Professor's segment, obviously, wouldn't air. The show was pretty much an immediate hit...and it pretty much defined the direction of Ray's career for the foreseeable future. There were 13 half hour episodes taped for the show's First Season...and then production got underway for a second season of 13 half hour episodes.

The production cycle/air-date cycle for most cable television series is 13 first run/13 rerun and then 13 first run/13 rerun after which all 26 episodes are repeated to make up a calendar year. On network television all 26 first run episodes air and then they're reran during the spring and summer months until the upcoming Fall season. Also, on cable TV, 13 episodes is defined as a 'season' whereas on network TV 13 episodes is defined as 'half a season'.

If the success of the television series wasn't enough...on top of that the comedy CD from earlier in the year and the two recent music videos of songs from that CD (the two on-line videos being "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me" and "You Didn't Build That")...if all of that wasn't proof enough of Ray's tireless energies at making music and being in top creative form then the groundbreaking in early March 2016 of his music venue in West Nashville stunned whatever critics may have been lingering around with their belief that Ray's career was over and finished years ago. It's been said that everyone has a critic and Ray is no exception. I believe there are people that simply thrive on criticizing just to be criticizing without any real need for it.

The music venue would be publicized as a dinner theater...with an intimate setting comprised of stage, tables, and theater seating in the balcony. There would be a dinner option (table seats on level one) but for those that wanted to skip the dinner they could sit up in the balcony...which itself is quality seating. The plans for the venue also included an area for a gift shop, a piano bar, and a recording studio for audio and video productions. After breaking ground on the venue the actual construction of the venue was put on delay for almost half a year due to local zoning and political laws...as well as the finalization of receiving a building permit. The land had already been purchased by Ray...but the application for the building permit is what took so long. Once the permit was okayed then real construction started taking place...but due to the long delay it meant the announced grand opening would also be delayed. Ray, initially, was aiming for a Christmas season opening in the latter half of 2016...but approval to construct didn't arrive until midway through 2016. The name of the upcoming venue had officially been announced as CabaRay...a pun of cabaret, of course, but using Ray's name.

The 13 episode second season of Ray Stevens' Nashville began airing in the spring/summer of 2016. The show then went into a repeat cycle once the 13 first run episodes concluded that fall. The series was promoted by RFD-TV as it's most-watched original series in the latter half of 2016. It was referenced this way because the most-watched series on the network continues to be the repeats of Hee Haw on Sunday nights.

In the fall of 2016 Ray issued a music video titled "Dear America". The song comes from the pen of Connie Jo Hamrick, the wife of Ray's keyboard player. The website titled The Boot received exclusive rights to premiere the music video on their website and they did so on September 6, 2016. A lot of people loved the song/video and there were comparisons made to it being a reverse of "Everything is Beautiful" in the presentation...for "Dear America" concludes with a choir of children singing whereas in "Everything is Beautiful" the song opens with a choir of children. The video came days before the 15th anniversary of 9/11 and it reminded a lot of people that Ray was very much a patriot and supporter of America's military and core values. The video itself made it's YouTube debut several hours after the exclusive premiere on The Boot website. It's since gotten over 348,000 unique views on YouTube. A brief behind-the-scenes look at the song debuted on YouTube on September 1, 2016...it shows only pieces of the actual music video so it's not the full version from several days later. Ray explains his reasons for recording the song and it shows sheet music and handwritten notations from Ray, too...

 

The full music video is on YouTube, of course. If that promo video stirred up your emotions I recommend you visit YouTube after you've finished reading this blog entry and search for "Dear America" from Ray Stevens.

In November of 2016, a year since the debut of Ray Stevens' Nashville, he issued a Christmas CD titled Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me. A couple of days later, November 16, 2016 a music video of the title track hit YouTube. The title track was co-written by country singer Jeff Bates and had been recorded by him several years before Ray recorded his own version. The music video from Ray features hand puppets accompanying him with the performance. The CD features Ray's take on Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas is You"...and it also includes the debut of 2012's "Merry Christmas" on CD...previously only available as a music video. A song that Ray wrote decades earlier and had been previously recorded by Perry Como, "Christmas Bells in the Steeple", appears on this CD. "Christmas Will Be Just Another Lonely Day" had previously been recorded by Brenda Lee. Aside from the title track the only other original, recent Christmas offering on this 2016 CD is "Claws (A Cat's Letter to Santa)". The latter a very funny song that I'm surprised was never attempted in music video format...but yet it's a song from a cat's Christmas list and so how could such a thing be attempted unless you try limited animation or video trickery of some sort...or Ray himself could've dressed in a full size cat suit (like Telly Savalas did for his appearance in Alice in Wonderland). Ray's CD was issued on his new label, CabaRay Entertainment.

News reports surfaced in late November 2016 that Ray would part company with RFD-TV upon the conclusion of the repeats of his television series. The satellite/cable channel had been airing the series each Saturday night since it's debut on November 7, 2015. The series was re-launched in January 2017 in local syndication on PBS stations across the country as Ray Stevens' CabaRay Nashville. This slightly altered title was a tie-in to the music venue still under heavy construction in West Nashville. Ray planned on having the venue opened by the spring/summer of 2017. The episodes of Ray's show that were airing on local PBS stations in the first half of 2017 were the RFD episodes. Production on all new episodes were underway, though, and those began airing on local PBS stations in the summer of 2017. The first episode of Season Three (13 episodes total) guest starred Mandy Barnett and Harold Bradley...it hit the air during the weekend of July 7, 2017. Season Three was even more diverse in guest stars than Season One and Season Two. One of the episodes of Season Three guest starred guitarist Duane Eddy...and another guest starred another one of Ray's 1960's contemporaries, Tommy Roe...but, like in Season One and Season Two, there were plenty of country music performers gracing the stage and taking their seat next to Ray's red piano. The CabaRay itself was completed by the latter half of 2017...but a grand opening date wasn't scheduled until the next calendar year. So, in my final installment of this mini-blog series of Ray Stevens' road to the Country Music Hall of Fame, I'll pick up in January 2018.

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