Happy Easter Sunday to all the Ray Stevens fans!! In Easter's past I once highlighted Ray's 1990 comedy album, Lend Me Your Ears, because the cover photo has Ray dressed up as Marc Antony, from Julius Caesar, holding a rabbit. This Easter, however, I'm going to lead things off with a gospel recording from Ray Stevens.
An audio clip of Ray's 1972 gospel recording, "Let Our Love Be a Light Unto the People", was uploaded onto Ray's social media pages earlier today. The song comes from the pen of John Ragsdale, Ray's brother, who recently passed away. The track originated on Ray's first gospel album, Turn Your Radio On.
In 2014 when Ray released his second gospel album, The Gospel Collection, he filled out the album with his renditions of gospel and inspirational songs. However, there was one original gospel song on the album from the pen of Don Cusic titled "If Jesus is a Stranger". Ray performed it on several television shows and one of those performances is located below...
The studio recording of "Turn Your Radio On" by Ray Stevens is a bit different than how he performs it in concert. Almost immediately after the single hit in the latter half of 1971 he was performing it with a slightly different vocal delivery with heavy emphasis on rhythm and blues. If you've never seen Ray perform the song in concert and are only familiar with the studio recording from the early '70s take a look at Ray performing the song in 2017 on an episode of the television series Mike Huckabee hosts on The Trinity Broadcasting Network. The Huckabee television series began in 2008 on the Fox News Channel and ended it's run in 2015. Huckabee ended the series due to his campaign for President. After the 2016 election Huckabee returned to television but on a different network, TBN, in the fall of 2017. The show was still in production prior to the COVID-19 partial lock downs.
This 2017 performance of "Turn Your Radio On" is a bit of a departure as Ray is usually playing a piano or a keyboard when he sings the song but here he's standing on stage belting out the song. Ray's trio of female harmony singers are on hand but his usual group of musicians aren't present on this appearance. Mike Huckabee is seen playing the guitar and it's his band that played behind the music guests.
A couple of blogs ago I wrote about John Ragsdale passing away. In the blog I mentioned a couple of songs that he wrote that Ray recorded. In the blog entry I mentioned "Talking" from Ray's 1970 album, Unreal, and I mentioned "Let Our Love Be a Light Unto the People" found on Ray's Turn Your Radio On album. However, I completely forgot that John co-wrote a 1982 Ray Stevens recording, "Country Boy, Country Club Girl". That song is on Ray's 1982 album, Don't Laugh Now. The co-writer of the song is Buddy Kalb...himself no stranger to the songwriter credits on many Ray Stevens albums. When I was looking at a Ray Stevens CD in my collection, Collector's Series, released by RCA Records, it has "Country Boy, Country Club Girl" on it. The songwriters are credited on that compilation and that's where I was reminded of John's co-write of that song.
There is an audio track of that song on YouTube but it isn't affiliated with Ray's channel. It was uploaded onto YouTube on April 8, 2013. I'm going to embed that 1982 audio recording so you can hear it...perhaps it'll be new to you and maybe entice you to seek out Ray's other early '80s recordings for RCA. Ray's recorded output from the late '70s to early '80s is under-rated, obscure, and often under-appreciated because the majority of his recordings during that time period were not zany, bizarre, comical, novelty songs...his recordings were straight, serious ballads.
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