February 23, 2020

Ray Stevens: His latest On-line Activities...

Well, here I am again writing another fan created blog entry about Ray Stevens. There have been numerous on-line video posts within the last several days...and when I posted my previous blog entry I purposely left out a video clip because I wanted to highlight it later in another blog entry...and this is the one. The video clip is of Ray in 1992 at his former theater in Branson, Missouri performing "You Gotta Have a Hat". The performance became part of his 1993 VHS home video, Ray Stevens Live!. The song is about the Hat Acts in country music...there had always been country music artists that wore cowboy hats but during a specific time frame from 1989 to 1994 nearly all New Country artists wore cowboy hats. There were so many that critics coined the phrase 'Hat Acts'. There were just as many that came along without hats, too. The song primarily creates the scenario of what might happen should Ray Stevens, with a lengthy reputation for comedy, suddenly began wearing a cowboy hat in an attempt to generate sex appeal and record sales. In order to keep the mood light and playful, though, Ray performs most of the song in a peculiar style of cowboy hat.



Jumping back 31 years from that 1992 performance we have an audio clip of Ray's 1961 recording, "When You Wish Upon a Star". This recording was found on the B-side of a single that Mercury issued on Ray titled "Scratch My Back ( I Love It)" in October 1961. The B-side wasn't placed on Ray's first studio album for Mercury in 1962 and it's remained on vinyl as a B-side. The audio's been uploaded onto the internet several times prior to Ray officially uploading the audio a couple of days ago...but if you want the recording on vinyl you'd have to search for "Scratch My Back (I Love It)". Ray's rendition of "When You Wish Upon a Star" is bluesy...which you'll be able to tell right away from the music intro and his phrasing. It's the same song associated with the Disney company...the song debuted in 1940 in the animated film, Pinocchio, performed by Cliff Edwards (voice of Jiminy Cricket). Here's the bluesy Ray Stevens performance...



On a slight technical note I'm a blogger who pays attention to the numbers surrounding this fan created blog page and when I wrote my previous entry on February 16th the Stat Counter numbers shown 10,502 page views. A couple of days later I returned to read some of my older posts to see if there were any kind of grammatical errors, etc. and I glanced over at the Stat Counter tracker and the page view total had dropped by at least 200...it shown the page views at a little more than 10,300 whereas a couple of days earlier they were at 10,502. How can your page view statistics drop!? I thought they could only increase as time goes by. Anyway, this morning the page view was sitting at 10,534 but had there not have been a cut in page views for whatever reason those numbers should be in the 10,700 range. I hadn't found any explanation about it...my own theory is the tracking program eliminated false views generated by some sort of social media bot, I think that's the correct terminology? I'm not a technical wizard by any means...but I know simple mathematics and could see a subtraction of my page view total...but back to the focus of this blog...

Here's Ray Stevens live on stage at the CabaRay performing the country music classic, "Abilene", popularized by George Hamilton IV. In the video clip Ray tells of the song and points out the photo on the wall of the song's writer, John D. Loudermilk, in addition to steel guitarist, Pete Drake, and famed session musician/string wizard, Bergen White, as well as a photo of George Hamilton IV.



A new upload of one of Ray's vintage television commercials for Flav-O-Rich emerged on-line back on February 20th. In this clip Ray and a kid are sitting on a porch and the kid asks where ice cream comes from. Ray replies and then the kid wonders if Flav-O-Rich is the place that Ray is 'always singing about'. Ray confirms it's true and then asks the kid if he'd like to hear him sing a jingle...



Does anyone know if Flav-O-Rich is still in existence? I've come across numerous contradictions all over the internet...some websites declare the company no longer exists and other sites say it was bought out by Borden...but if you look up the Flav-O-Rich company on-line it gives a physical address and location...headquartered in London, Kentucky...but then other websites give that address and location to the Borden Dairy Company of Kentucky. An image I came across of a gallon of milk with a label brand of Flav-O-Rich states it was distributed by Borden...but then there's a story that says Borden filed for bankruptcy just last month. Whatever the case...Ray had a lengthy run as spokesman for Farm Best/Flav-O-Rich throughout the latter half of the 1970s and into the first half of the 1980s.

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