April 30, 2020

Ray Stevens: I Used to Be Crazy...

One of zaniest novelty songs to come from Ray Stevens happens to be a recording from 1989 titled "I Used To Be Crazy". The album from Ray that year was titled Beside Myself and it marked a departure for Ray to a certain degree. In 1984 Ray signed a recording contract with MCA Records to record comedy albums. A series of successful comedy albums from Ray completely cemented his reputation as a novelty artist. His first five studio albums for MCA were all comedy and most of them ranked high on the Country Album chart. In addition to the studio albums there were several compilation albums that were top sellers of the time period. Below I've listed the releases by MCA on Ray Stevens during the 1984-1988 time period. The albums in bold print are studio albums and those in bold italics are compilation albums:

1984: He Thinks He's Ray Stevens
1985: I Have Returned
1986: Surely You Joust
1987: Greatest Hits
1987: Crackin' Up
1987: Greatest Hits, Volume Two
1987: Get The Best of Ray Stevens
1988: I Never Made a Record I Didn't Like

In that time period Ray seen five of those albums make the Top-50 on the Country Album chart while another, Get The Best of Ray Stevens, became a direct-mail hit. He taped several commercials for the album and advertisements for it appeared in newspapers and magazines. It's considered his first direct-mail project. He Thinks He's Ray Stevens as well as the Greatest Hits album would eventually be certified Gold and then Platinum. I Have Returned and Greatest Hits, Volume Two was certified Gold. After the release of his 1988 studio album he issued Beside Myself in 1989 and unlike the previous five studio albums this one featured a mix of comedy and serious recordings. One of those comedy recordings is the album closer, "I Used To Be Crazy". In this recording Ray displays his skilled mimicry of several celebrities in addition to his mastery of good old fashioned silliness with heavy emphasis on vocal lunacy.

Ray performed this song on an episode of Hee Haw in 1989 and that performance is on YouTube. In the performance he's wearing sunglasses. The official music video came along a few years later in 1995 as part of his direct-to-VHS movie, Get Serious!. Ray's co-star, Connie Freeman, can be seen at the start of the music video. Ray's vocal performance for the 1995 recording is different than his 1989 studio recording. In the 1995 recording, for his movie, he sings the song as his character, Sickmind Fraud, in an exaggerated Austrian accent. The music video has clips from Get Serious! sprinkled throughout when Ray begins to sing about how people cast aspersions on creative souls like himself.

The 1989 performance is wild...



As I said the 1989 performance is certainly wild but the official 1995 music video is wild in it's own kind of way...they're both highly entertaining...



Ray performed this song on an episode of Music City Tonight in early 1996. The entire episode was devoted to the movie and billed as 'Get Serious Night'. In addition to Ray the rest of the country music performers who appeared in cameo roles appeared on this 1996 episode: Chet Atkins, Jerry Clower (more of a supporting player than a cameo role), Johnny Russell, James Gregory, George Lindsey, Williams and Ree. Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase hosted Music City Tonight. Charlie had a cameo in the movie and it was revealed that Lorianne would have also had a cameo role in the movie had she been available (she was either suffering a flu-like ailment or had undergone surgery of some kind). Ray filmed the movie in and around Burns, Tennessee in the late summer/fall of 1994. I should also point out that when Ray sang "Ahab the Arab" on that 1996 episode Charlie Chase rode out on the stuffed Clyde the Camel prop as Ahab while Lorianne played Fatima. In the show's opening number, "Gitarzan", Ray wore his Tarzan costume from the movie and Jane was played by Buddy Kalb. Neither Connie Freeman, who co-starred in the movie as Charlene MacKenzie, nor Michael Airington, who co-starred as cynical music mogul Damien Darth, appeared on 'Get Serious Night' in 1996.

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