October 14, 2019

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

It has now come to this...the final installment of this mini-blog series chronicling the career path of Ray Stevens as he made his way to the Country Music Hall of Fame. I have reached January 2018 and this is another busy month for Ray...the opening of his long-anticipated venue, CabaRay, dominated the local headlines. The showroom, located on River Road in West Nashville, had a VIP opening on January 10, 2018. The audience make-up consisted of family and friends...and some of the footage and interviews made their way onto the internet in addition to being featured on local television news outlets.

1/10/18: Ray Stevens Day
This photo of Ray circulated on the internet back on January 10th and in the next few days which declared January 10, 2018 to be Ray Stevens Day. The official declaration, signed by Nashville mayor, Megan Barry, is on display in the photo. The grand opening of the CabaRay to the general public came more than a week later. The overall layout of the interior, according to numerous interviews from Ray, was inspired by a venue he used to appear in numerous times in the past...a Las Vegas attraction called The Desert Inn. Ray commented that he wanted this to be a showroom...an intimate supper club kind of venue...and there's dinner served to those that choose that option. The floor level seats are actually tables...where you eat before the concert. Those that choose balcony seats are provided the opportunity for drink service but if you want the dinner option you'll have to purchase floor level tickets. There are booth's located on the floor level, too. The booth's are named after several record producers. Oh yes, the CabaRay also contains a piano bar...the official name is the Bill Lowery High Spirits Emporium. The walls are lined with photo's of numerous musicians, record producers, recording artists, as well as photo's, of course, of Ray. The gift shop is located just inside the main entrance. CDs, T-shirts, and trinkets of all kinds are offered...a lot of these trinkets aren't sold in his on-line store and so the only way to get these gifts is by visiting the gift shop. Large photo's of his album covers line the walls of the gift shop but those aren't for sale. The gift shop generally opens 1 hour before the dinner...the Piano Bar opens 2 hours ahead of the dinner. The piano playing can be heard throughout the showroom...so you don't necessarily have to literally be inside the bar to hear it. The piano player/singer wraps up several minutes before Ray comes out on stage. After the concert Ray usually appears in the Piano Bar to sign autographs or sing songs accompanied by the bar's piano player. The upstairs area contains trophy cases lined with his awards. How do I know all of this?? Well, I attended a concert at the CabaRay a couple of months after it opened...oh how I'd love to get back there one day!!

The performance schedule at the showroom is typically confined to Friday and Saturday nights. There are times when a Thursday night concert is added in addition to Friday and Saturday. Ray made it perfectly clear in those grand opening interviews that he didn't want this to turn into another Branson-type of arrangement. If you're not familiar or are unsure of what he was referring to he was referring back to his early '90s run at the theater he headlined for three seasons, 1991-1993, and how at that time he did two shows a day, six days a week with very little downtime. So, this time around, the CabaRay, unlike The Ray Stevens Theatre, features one concert per night from Ray on Friday and Saturday and occasionally Thursday. In his memoir Ray remarks that the 2 shows a day, 6 days a week Branson schedule left him physically and mentally exhausted...so it shouldn't come as a surprise that the CabaRay would have a far less physically demanding pace. On the music front he had previously issued three CD's in 2016: Just a Closer Walk With Thee/Gospel Favorites, Love Lifted Me, and the holiday release, Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me, in addition to the music video/single only, "Dear America". The first gospel release was the second volume of gospel songs released through Bill Gaither's record company while Love Lifted Me was a re-issue of Ray's early '70s gospel album with a unique twist: The music tracks were from the 1972 studio album but the audio tracks were re-recordings, except for one song, "Let Our Love Be a Light Unto the People". The Christmas CD, to date, remains the last CD project he's released.

Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville continued airing in local syndication on PBS television stations across the country throughout 2018. In August of 2018 the city of Nashville selected Ray as one of that year's recipient's for the Music City Walk of Fame. The attraction is located across the street from the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum...recording artists of all music genres have received Stars on this cemented row of musicians. It's kind of like the Hollywood Walk of Fame...but without the massive hype/attention.

August 21, 2018
The sixth season of Ray's television series wrapped up in the summer of 2018...a little more than a month prior to the Music City Walk of Fame honor. The series, as of this writing, has a total of 78 half hour episodes. The show's title, CabaRay Nashville, was used as a tie-in to the showroom even though almost all of the episodes were taped at a recording studio on Music Row. The last ten episodes of Season Six originated at the CabaRay, though. In the last couple of months in 2018 Ray put on a Christmas series of concerts at the CabaRay showroom before closing things down for the year.

The venue closed down for a couple of months but re-opened for it's second season of concerts in early March 2019. By this time Ray had reached age 80 (back on January 24th) and his CabaRay Nashville television series was returning to the RFD-TV airwaves in addition to a second series, Rayality TV, making it's RFD-TV debut...all of these happenings arrived during the month of January but the biggest news of all arrived on the morning of March 18, 2019. It was on this day that WSM radio personality, Bill Cody, in a news conference, delivered the latest list of inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame. I was watching the news coverage that morning and it was surreal...as soon as Bill began reading about the inductee being from the small cotton mill town of Clarkdale, Georgia I couldn't believe my ears!!! Ray's election/induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame is something I had championed for years and years. I have always felt that his lack of presence in the Hall of Fame among those he worked with or worked for over the decades was a shame...but beyond that just his talents alone and the impact he had with songs, albums, home videos, and on-line music videos provides a perfect display of his artistic range and why he belongs in the Country Music Hall of Fame.

His talents as a singer/songwriter/musician/producer/arranger/publisher touch every facet of the music industry. For some country music fans they feel election to the Country Music Hall of Fame is more or less a prestigious popularity award. In this mindset they feel that Hall of Fame members need millions upon millions of album sales and dozens of Top-10 and number one hits to qualify. You can have a very successful career without being the dominant headliner or without being known all over the country. Anyway, Ray continued on with his CabaRay concerts, of course. Wednesday nights saw the addition of taping sessions for Larry's Country Diner, a series that airs on RFD-TV. I suspect that Ray had plans for new music to be released this year but the March announcement of his election to the Country Music Hall of Fame perhaps blindsided him so much that everything he had planned was put on hold. There are still several months left in 2019 so it's possible he'll issue something by year's end. In the summer of 2019 Ray appeared on the Close-Up Stage at CMA Fest...being interviewed about his career and recent election to the Hall of Fame. He served as Grand Marshal of an area Shriner's parade in June and held a private concert at the CabaRay for the Shriner's...photo's surfaced which looked as if they came right out of his 1980 "Shriner's Convention" song...but for the record there were no Shriner's in the photos wearing a Fez with a propeller on top.

I have this photo posted along the right hand side of the blog page. It's a photo of Ray inside the rotunda at the Country Music Hall of Fame during the morning of March 18, 2019 after being named one of the 2019 inductees into the Hall of Fame. His plaque will be unveiled this coming October 20th at the private Medallion Ceremony. The gala is a private function but photos, video, and audio from the event show up on-line almost immediately afterward. I felt this was a perfect photo of Ray to use as publicity for his upcoming induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame and so I also have it posted on the photo time line off to the right. Ray gave an acceptance speech back on March 18th when the news broke that he was one of the artists going into the Hall of Fame this year and it's available to see and hear on YouTube. The big speech won't take place until October 20th when the formal induction takes place. I, like so many of his fans, are eager to hear what he has to say and if it's going to be full of laughs or if it'll be serious and dare I say, tear-jerking. Ray isn't known as an artist that shows those kinds of emotions publicly...and so I'm anxious to see/hear Ray's speech once his plaque is revealed for all to see. This mini-blog series was designed not to be an in-depth career history (although that's probably how it turned out) but more or less an overview of his career with some emphasis placed on things that elevate his career as something other than 'novelty singer' which is how he's viewed and it's what his reputation is even though you and I know Ray Stevens is much more than a 'novelty singer'.

In this mini-blog series I attempted to show his skills as producer, music arranger, and his role as music publisher...and the many styles of music he's recorded over the decades. While it's true that the comedy songs and the equally comedic music videos are tough to overcome in the overall legacy of Ray Stevens this mini-blog series gave equal time, in some cases more, to his serious recordings and to more serious aspects of his recording career...at least I happen to think it did. "Don't look, Ethel" is a very popular catchphrase associated with Ray Stevens...but don't let that catchphrase dictate your opinion regarding Ray's overall career. His serious recordings from the late '50s to the present time are definitely worth looking at and discovering if all you know about Ray Stevens is a comedy song or two from the '70s or '80s.

Tune into CabaRay Nashville every Saturday night on RFD-TV at 8pm Eastern or if you don't have the channel look for the show on your local PBS stations. When you watch his television show you'll know exactly why Ray Stevens belongs in the Country Music Hall of Fame and formal induction takes place in six days...October 20, 2019.

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