Hello one and all...yesterday happened to be the 85th birthday of country music legend, Bobby Bare. To mark that event the social media sites of Ray Stevens posted a video clip of Bobby, from 2009, performing "Detroit City" on an episode of a short-lived sitcom Ray starred in called We Ain't Dead Yet. If you'd seen episodes of the clip-filled Rayality TV series, which recently ended it's run on RFD-TV, it contained bits and pieces from that 2009 series. In the video clip you'll see several people that have since passed away...
Bobby recorded the majority of his songs for RCA Records and in the producer's booth was Chet Atkins. The style of country music coming out of Nashville in the late 1950s and well into the early 1970s was nicknamed The Nashville Sound. Chet Atkins, Owen Bradley, and Bob Ferguson are typically given equal credit for creating The Nashville Sound. It could be described as pop music arrangements placed on top of, lyrically country, songs. In the umbrella of The Nashville Sound there was a style referred to as Countrypolitan and that sound, historically, is connected to the records produced by Billy Sherrill. This style expanded on the Nashville Sound and it incorporated even more strings, soaring music arrangements, more background harmonies, and there was an overall glossy/beautiful production of the traditional country song. Those who prefer minimal production with sparse instrumentation consider The Nashville Sound, and especially Countrypolitan, to be "overly-produced, overblown, over-the-top, overbearing, and obnoxious". Those are just some of the more polite descriptions from country music purists! Anyway...
Nearly a decade after Bobby Bare sang "Detroit City" on We Ain't Dead Yet in 2009 he was a guest star on an episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville a couple of years ago. In this episode one of the songs performed was "Streets of Baltimore". Bobby made reference to Ray's music arranging skills in this episode. Ray wasn't credited as an arranger on the recording. I'd previously searched for images of the single release and the LP, last year, and the music arrangers aren't credited.
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