December 25, 2019

Ray Stevens: Christmas 2019...

Hello one and all and Merry Christmas!! Ray Stevens wrote this song and taped a video for it in 2012 and it immediately struck a chord with the on-line community...the song, "Merry Christmas". It debuted as a music video and wasn't found on any CD until several years later in 2016 when Ray issued his third Christmas album, Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me. It's a powerful song in a lot of ways...some may find it too strong for the overall season...but it's a song that cuts through a lot of the glib chatter that comes with festive holidays and addresses the decades long verbal assault from varying sectors of society when it comes to using the phrase 'merry Christmas' rather than 'Happy Holidays' or 'Seasons Greetings'.



Now, staying with this same 2016 album, we have an audio upload from Ray of his sensational version of "All I Want For Christmas Is You", previously a massive hit for one of it's writers, Mariah Carey. When Ray's 2016 Christmas CD was released and I heard his version of that song I instantly made it among my all-time favorite Ray Stevens recordings of any season. Ray uploaded this audio clip a couple days ago back on December 23rd.



Wasn't that fabulous?? An upload arrived yesterday in the form of a performance by Ray Stevens on his CabaRay Nashville television series. It comes from one his Christmas episodes (he taped two separate Christmas episodes) and he's singing the title track of his third Christmas album in this video clip...here's Ray singing "Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me"...



As many of you should know there is an official music video of that song, too. In it Ray shares the spotlight with a group of puppets and stuffed animals. It's a cute music video that I've shared in previous Christmas themed blog entries I've written but this is the first time his performance of the song from his television series has become available on-line. If I were to rate the official video and the CabaRay Nashville performance as to which one I preferred I'd rate the television performance first and the official music video second...even though I love both. The television performance doesn't include the donkey braying heard in the studio recording nor does it contain the harmony vocals and over-dubs from Ray. The trio of back-up singers on Ray's television show handle most of the vocals that, in the studio recording, were performed by Ray.

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