January 20, 2020

Ray Stevens: CD at Five...

March 2015
Hello all fans of Ray Stevens!! It's the start of a new week and as you all should know we'll close out this week celebrating the birthday of the one and only Ray Stevens on January 24th. I don't want to post too much about that today due to my desire to save my commentary for this coming Friday and so I'll get to the topic of this blog entry...the fifth anniversary of Here We Go Again!. I'm a couple months early (the CD was released March 23, 2015) but I decided to go ahead and spotlight the anniversary of it's release now so that it doesn't interfere with blog entries I'll be writing that month surrounding the third season of his CabaRay showroom getting underway the same month. Who knows? Perhaps by the time we reach March there will have been a new Ray Stevens CD hit the market or at least a new on-line music video? I sound like a broken record, of course, but I am anxious to hear whatever new recordings are forthcoming from recently inducted Country Music Hall of Fame member, Ray Stevens. When this CD was issued in the spring of 2015 the music video, "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me", had already taken off on social media. The video was released on February 24, 2015 a month and one day ahead of the CD. The video had gotten nearly half a million unique views on YouTube by the time the CD became available. As of this writing the unique view total is 2.5 million. The specifics in numbers are 2,543,458. 



I wrote a review of the CD on this fan created blog page as well as on Amazon. Now, according to the product details over on AMAZON, there are 14 copies of the CD left in stock. You can also purchase a CD copy from Ray's on-line web-store, of course. I was reading my review prior to composing this blog entry and I noticed there are a couple of typo's as well as a sentence where I left out some words. I don't know if other people deal with this but a lot of time I find myself typing words that I'm saying to myself and in my mind I think I've typed them but sometimes when I go and re-read what I've written I'll notice a word or two had been left out. I don't know if it's a case of the mind being quicker than the hands or not. I'm going to paste my 2015 review below with the corrected typo's and odd sentence. I'm not going to edit the review over on Amazon, though, but I've copied and pasted my review below with the corrections...

***This review contains spoilers***

After taking a detour, of sorts, over the last 5+ years and releasing some hilarious political songs on a couple of CD's, plus issuing a 9-CD box set called "The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music" (containing his versions of novelty songs of the last 50+ years), a majestic gospel CD last year called "Gospel Collection, Volume One", and a memoir titled "Ray Stevens' Nashville"...after those projects, Ray Stevens returns to country comedy on his latest CD.

The cover art, as you can see, takes place in an airport setting. In a touch of silliness, a gorilla plays the part of the chauffeur. On the back of the CD the songs are listed as if they're flights posted on the Arrival board. The CD's first single release arrived in music video form a month ago...titled "Taylor Swift is Stalkin' Me" it's a story of a man that's obsessed with the belief that he's being stalked by the pop-country singer because, according to him, he sees her everywhere and given that her likeness appears everywhere he happens to think she's stalking him. The song has a comical twist ending, though. Throughout the song he insists that Taylor's up in a tree looking at him with binoculars.

After the bouncy opening track about Taylor we're treated to Ray covering one of his musical idols, Ray Charles. I pretty much know that the purists that'll hear the Ray Stevens rendition of the Ray Charles classic "What'd I Say" aren't gong to like it. After all, they may ask, how can you top a Ray Charles recording?

I don't necessarily believe Ray Stevens set out to try and top the classic rendition from Ray Charles, though. I think that Ray Stevens simply wanted to record the song and so he did. I happen to love the rendition. Even if some may groan about the idea of someone other than the late Ray Charles performing that song at least it gives Ray Stevens an opportunity to display his obvious love for classic Rhythm and Blues music.

Aside from the song about Taylor Swift, one of my other favorites from this CD is "There Must Be a Pill For This". This one is vintage Ray Stevens...it tells the story of pills...and the enormous quantity of pills that are on the market for everything under the sun. Pills to help thick people lose weight, and pills to help frail people gain weight. It's a satire on pills...miracle pills, specifically...and as an added pleasure there's a parody of those lengthy disclaimers that appear as voice-overs on healthcare commercials.

The tempo changes for the next song, "Walkin' the Dog". In this one Ray sings of constantly bickering with his wife. Instead of moping around the house he simply goes outside, gets Rover, and walks the dog. He reckons that once he starts to take the dog for a walk he may run into a woman putting on the dog (presumably to be a possible new love interest). Track Five is thrilling...a cover of "Hearts Made of Stone". I looked up the song's title and found out that it had been a Rhythm and Blues hit in 1954 for a group called The Charms. I had heard a brief audio clip of Ray's recording on Amazon and since that time I had been wondering the reason for the 1950's-style of audio (complete with echo!) but I eventually found out the reason for the distinctive arrangement when discovering it had originally been recorded in the 1950s by The Charms as previously mentioned. It's clearly the stand-out song on the CD if only for it not vocally sounding like anything else. I love the over-dubbed do-wah harmonies heard throughout.

The most country sounding recording on the entire CD is "Pickin' on the Chicken". This one, too, is one of my favorites. In the song Ray sings from a chicken's point of view and he demands to know the reason so many negative expressions are associated with chickens, hens, and eggs. Throughout the song we're treated to a list of expressions and sayings that put the chicken in a bad light...expressions like 'madder than a wet hen'; 'that's chicken feed'; 'He's got egg on his face'; 'One flew the coop'; etc. Ray also manages to get in a reference to Willie Nelson, too, in a laugh out loud funny one-liner.

The second-most country sounding recording is "The Baptism of Stumpy Brown". The song is about an atheist that suddenly finds religion in his 90s and insists on being baptized as a result. The frail body in a raging river is bound to cause some incidents...and Ray tells of those in this story. Inspiration surfaces in the song "Little by Little". There is a song on here called "You Didn't Build That"...let's just say I find it hilarious...but it's something that more than likely is not going to go over too well with, say, fans of the President. That song is followed by a contemporary classic in the form of the illegal immigration anthem "Come to the U.S.A." (a song from 2010). Illegal immigration is a hot topic and one that's consistently controversial. Although I'm reviewing the CD there's an Mp3 copy for sale, too, and that means customers can pick and choose the songs they want to purchase from Here We Go Again!. I prefer having a physical copy of the CD.

Along the lines of manhood and masculinity comes "A Handshake Will Do", track 11. The lyrics cry foul on guys hugging other guys unless it's called for and Ray gives examples for when it's okay. Ironically, on the day this CD went on sale, a picture of Larry Gatlin attempting to hug Ray appeared on Ray's social media sites. There's no reference to this song as far as the picture is concerned, though. I call it just one of those ironic coincidences.

Ray had appeared as a guest artist on the Grand Ole Opry on March 21st on a segment hosted by Larry Gatlin.

The CD's closing track, "Knock Him Out John", is another one of my favorites. I call it a tribute to the late Jerry Clower. It's a recap of Jerry's story of the time he and some of his friends went hunting for raccoons and ended up having an encounter with a lynx. Ray's recording is the story set to music. Ray does his rendition of Jerry's holler and it appears at various moments during the song's chorus.

I thoroughly enjoyed the CD...his restless energy and incredible vocals are on full display on this CD!


***End of CD Review***


Yes, that's me displaying my economy sized pill box as a visual tie-in with one of the songs found on the 2015 CD, "There Must Be a Pill For This". The song is from the pen of Don Cusic and if you're a more dedicated fan of Ray Stevens then you're fully aware of Don Cusic or at least should be. He's written a couple of songs that Ray's recorded within the last 6 years. He wrote an essay within the pages of an accompanying booklet of Ray's 9-CD box set, The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music, in 2012. If you have Ray's 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville, you'll see Don's name credited as the book's editor. Don wrote a gospel song that Ray recorded called "If Jesus is a Stranger" which can be found on Ray's CD, Gospel Collection, Volume One. I looked up his history and career at the time and discovered that he happened to be a college professor and had authored numerous books and is often referred to as a Professor of Music. Don wrote "There Must Be a Pill For This", by the way. When Ray's television series, CabaRay Nashville, debuted in the fall of 2015 Don Cusic appeared in several early episodes dressed in a graduate gown for a segment spotlighting a song featured in Ray's 9-CD box set. Don would give a brief history of the song prior to Ray's performance of it on the show. If you visit the Amazon link I provided for his 2015 comedy CD you'll notice there isn't credit listed for the songwriters. The CD comes with a fold-out mini booklet which contains the lyrics of all the songs, the writers, and the publishing company. It also features commentary from Ray on the back of the booklet.

Here is the track list and the songwriters:

1. Taylor Swift is Stalking Me (Ray Stevens, Chuck Redden, and Buddy Kalb)
2. What'd I Say (Ray Charles)
3. There Must Be a Pill For This (Don Cusic)
4. Walkin' the Dog (Jim Ferguson)
5. Hearts Made of Stone (Eddie Ray and Rudy Jackson)
6. Pickin' on the Chicken (Buddy Kalb)
7. The Baptism of Stumpy Brown (Buddy Kalb and Allison Speer)
8. Little By Little (Buddy Kalb)
9. You Didn't Build That (Ray Stevens, Chuck Redden, and Buddy Kalb)
10. Come to the U.S.A. (Buddy Kalb and Matt Cline)
11. A Handshake Will Do (Matt Cline and Max T. Barnes)
12. Knock Him Out, John (Buddy Kalb)

Excluding a Christmas CD release in 2016 the Here We Go Again! CD, to date, is the last studio album that Ray has issued. Yes, even though the 2016 Christmas release is technically his last studio album to date, I'm excluding it because it's a seasonal album. Since the release of the 2015 we've had the 2016 Christmas CD in addition to a couple of DVD releases featuring Season One and Season Two episodes of his CabaRay Nashville television series. In interviews since 2016/2017 Ray has often mentioned that he has a backlog of recordings awaiting release. He's been so busy, though...first off with the production of his television program...and then with the grand opening of the CabaRay showroom in 2018. So, as mentioned at the top of this blog entry, I'm hoping some new projects come along during the first half of 2020. Here's some trivia...it was on this date in 1962 that Ray recorded "Ahab the Arab". I usually don't have recording dates memorized but I was reading various websites during the writing of this blog entry and I came across that tidbit of information in a post on social media from Where Have All the Pop Stars Gone?. It's a Facebook page and I often write commentary whenever there's a post about Ray Stevens. I'll more than likely wait until this coming Friday to write another blog entry...on Ray's birthday...unless some major news is issued concerning the release of new music.

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