April 4, 2020

Ray Stevens: Charlie McCoy CabaRay Nashville performance...

Ray Stevens and Charlie McCoy
Hello again...this video clip was uploaded onto YouTube back on March 28th but I hadn't gotten around to highlighting it in a blog entry until now. The clip is a harmonica performance by Charlie McCoy on an episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. If you know your Nashville session musicians then the name, Charlie McCoy, should be familiar. If you were/are a viewer of the Hee Haw television series then you should be familiar with Charlie McCoy. If you love country music and are a harmonica player then Charlie McCoy may have been one of your influences. In this clip we going to see Charlie perform his rendition of "Orange Blossom Special". This particular song has previously been recorded by hundreds of recording artists either as a vocal performance or as an instrumental. Some recording artists, if they also happen to be musicians, have recorded the song half vocal and half instrumental. Charlie, not being a vocalist, performs the song on the harmonica all the way through. He alternates harmonicas during the performance...going back and fourth from one harmonica to the next...giving the performance a personal touch.



Ray and Charlie, while not traveling in the same circles as session musicians, share similar experiences due to their history behind the scenes when it comes to making records. An often told anecdote about the two of them was their experience recording on a session for Elvis Presley...with the two of them playing instruments that neither specialized in but how both were able to pull off a successful performance. They were asked to play trumpets for an Elvis recording. I don't know how many songs were recorded during that session, though. I'd seen Ray and Charlie's name listed on several Elvis recordings within the musician credits. Ray is credited as a trumpet player on a dozen Elvis recordings during 1966. My information comes from a 2-CD collection released on Elvis in 1994 titled Amazing Grace which features a breakdown of musician credits for each recording. In the recordings dated May 25, 26, and 27 in the year 1966 it shows Ray credited as the session trumpet player. Charlie was credited on those sessions as either the guitar or harmonica player. Oddly enough the Wikipedia page for the Elvis gospel album How Great Thou Art from 1966, which features a lot of the songs that later appeared on the 1994 compilation CD, the Wikipedia page doesn't list a trumpet or Ray Stevens in the musician credits. The sessions took place at RCA's Studio B.

Charlie McCoy and Ray Stevens
I have no reason to doubt the accuracy of the musician credits but I've never done much research to see if I would come across any contradictory information beyond Wikipedia which is known for it's user-generated edits. Keep in mind those are musician credits for gospel recordings from Elvis...it's no telling if Ray appeared on secular recordings by Elvis that are tucked away on vinyl albums. In the meantime, Charlie McCoy continued appearing on Elvis recordings throughout the rest of the '60s and into the early '70s. Charlie began being more visible on Hee Haw as the '70s came near an end. He was part of the show's Million Dollar Band (which included Roy Clark, Floyd Cramer, Chet Atkins, Boots Randolph, Danny Davis, Johnny Gimble, and Jethro Burns). The Million Dollar Band appeared on 27 episodes of Hee Haw from 1980 until 1988, the bulk of those appearances came during the 1980-1983 television seasons, when the band appeared in 18 episodes. Their remaining 9 episodes featuring the Million Dollar Band were scattered throughout the 1984-1988 television seasons. Charlie was the show's music director for nearly 20 seasons and he began receiving recognition in the opening cast roll call, referred to as 'Charlie McCoy and the Hee Haw Band'. Charlie, and ironically, Hee Haw co-host Roy Clark, were both elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2009 (along with Barbara Mandrell). Ray Stevens received his Country Music Hall of Fame honor ten years later in 2019.

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