The title of this blog entry, of course, ties into it being the first of May. In this pandemic world we're experiencing it leaves a lot of time to create blog entries given that there's not much else going on outside of reporting to work if your job is determined essential. Thankfully Ray Stevens continues his presence on social media throughout the pandemic and as one could tell most of my blog entries reflect what's being posted on his social media pages. This blog entry, however, is one that I decided to compose out of the blue.
Earlier in the evening I was immersed in research...well, not necessarily for any particular blog entry...but I was immersed in looking through vintage newspaper articles and the like. I was reading several about Ray Stevens and one article, published in August 1993 by a writer named Jim Patterson, was titled Video Made the Radio Star. The article focused on the massively successful VHS tapes from Ray Stevens in 1992 and 1993, Comedy Video Classics and Ray Stevens Live!. The article was published at a time when the 1992 VHS was somewhat new in retail stores while the 1993 VHS was experiencing it's mail-order success. The 1993 VHS wouldn't be released to retail stores until 1994.
The article more or less spoke of the mail-order phenomena that had quietly been in the background of the music industry but in the late '80s and particularly in the 1990s it exploded into the mainstream. The title of the article suggested that mail-order product was being released on well established recording artists that had fell out of favor with radio programmers but yet were still popular...and sales of their mail-order projects were proving it. Ray released several albums through mail-order in the late '80s and early '90s. Get The Best of Ray Stevens was his first mail-order experiment in 1987. He created his own label, Clyde Records, in 1988 and issued an album on Boots Randolph, simply titled Boots. There were commercials taped for both mail-order projects.
Ray's Clyde Records imprint got it's greatest success with the VHS tapes...some were sold exclusively through his fan club and at his Branson, Missouri gift shop while others were released through mail-order and then in retail stores. Since his VHS releases made such an impact on his career I'm including those in this discography and I'm also including contractually obligated compilation albums. However, as the blog title states, this is a listing of his studio albums and so the main focus is on those releases. There have been many, many, many compilation albums released on Ray Stevens over the decades...some of them were contractually obligated or are notable for one reason or another, and I'll list those, while other compilations were a result of smaller, Independent labels paying licensing fees for his recordings to include on their compilation projects. Those kind of compilation albums I won't be listing. There's an official discography that lists practically everything that features a Ray Stevens song...but this discography only spotlights specific releases.
1. 1,837 Seconds of Humor; 1962 Mercury Records
2. This is Ray Stevens; 1963 Mercury Records
3. Even Stevens; 1968 Monument Records
4. Gitarzan; 1969 Monument Records
5. Have a Little Talk With Myself; 1969 Monument Records
6. The Best of Ray Stevens; 1970 Mercury Records
7. Everything is Beautiful; 1970 Barnaby Records
8. Unreal; 1970 Barnaby Records
9. Greatest Hits; 1971 Barnaby Records*
10. Turn Your Radio On; 1972 Barnaby Records
11. Nashville; 1973 Barnaby Records
12. Losin' Streak; 1973 Barnaby Records
13. Boogity Boogity; 1974 Barnaby Records
14. Misty; 1975 Barnaby Records
15. Just for the Record; 1976 Warner Brothers
16. Feel the Music; 1977 Warner Brothers
17. There is Something on Your Mind; 1978 Warner Brothers
18. Be Your Own Best Friend; 1978 Warner Brothers
19. The Feeling's Not Right Again; 1979 Warner Brothers**
20. Shriner's Convention; 1980 RCA
21. One More Last Chance; 1981 RCA
22. Don't Laugh Now; 1982 RCA
23. Greatest Hits; 1983 RCA
24. Me; 1983 Mercury Records
25. He Thinks He's Ray Stevens; 1984 MCA (Platinum Album)
26. I Have Returned; 1985 MCA (Gold Album)
27. Surely You Joust; 1986 MCA
28. Greatest Hits; 1987 MCA (Platinum Album)
29. Crackin' Up; 1987 MCA
30. Greatest Hits, Volume Two; 1987 MCA (Gold Album)
31. Get The Best of Ray Stevens; 1987 MCA
32. I Never Made a Record I Didn't Like; 1988 MCA
33. Beside Myself; 1989 MCA
34. His All-Time Greatest Comic Hits; 1990 Curb (Gold Album)
35. Lend Me Your Ears; 1990 Curb/Capitol
36. Number One with a Bullet; 1991 Curb/Capitol
37. Greatest Hits; 1991 Curb
38. Comedy Video Classics; 1992 Clyde Records VHS (Triple-Platinum)
39. Amazing Rolling Revue; 1992 Clyde Records VHS
40. Ray Stevens Live!; 1993 Clyde Records VHS (Double-Platinum)
41. Classic Ray Stevens; 1993 Curb (new recordings; album title refers to the cover art)
42. More Ray Stevens Live!; 1993 Clyde Records VHS
43. Get Serious!; 1995 Clyde Records VHS (Double-Platinum)
44. Ray Stevens Made a Movie?? Get Serious!!; 1995 Clyde Records VHS (documentary)
45. Latest and Greatest; 1996 Clyde Records VHS
46. Hum It; 1997 MCA
47. Ray Stevens Christmas - Through a Different Window; 1997 MCA
48. Funniest Video Characters; 1999 Clyde Records VHS
49. Ear Candy; 2000 Clyde Records
50. Osama Yo' Mama; 2002 Curb***
51. Thank You; 2004 Clyde Records
52. Box Set; 2005 Clyde Records****
53. New Orleans Moon; 2007 Clyde Records
54. Hurricane; 2008 Clyde Records
55. Ray Stevens Sings Sinatra...Say What??; 2008 Clyde Records
56. Ray Stevens Christmas; 2009 Clyde Records
57. One for the Road; 2009 Clyde Records
58. We The People; 2010 Clyde Records
59. Spirit of '76; 2011 Clyde Records
60. Bozo's Back Again; 2011 Clyde Records****
61. The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music; 2012 Clyde Records
62. Gospel Collection, Volume One; 2014 Gaither Music
63. Here We Go Again!; 2015 Player Records
64. Just a Closer Walk With Thee; 2016 Spring Hill
65. Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me; 2016 CabaRay Entertainment
An explanation of the various asterisks following some of the releases is as follows: 1971's Greatest Hits release was re-released in 1974 with the same track list and photo of Ray on both the front and back of the album. The lettering on front of the 1974 album is different from the 1971 release. Also, the vinyl pressing from 1974 features the Barnaby paper sleeve featuring the art work of a melted vinyl on a tree branch whereas the 1971 pressing has a solid blue paper sleeve. 1979's The Feeling's Not Right Again is a compilation album with only one new recording, "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow". 2002's Osama Yo' Mama is partially a re-issue of 2000's Ear Candy. The 2002 album features seven recordings from Ear Candy and three recent recordings: "Osama Yo' Mama", "United We Stand", and "Freudian Slip".
2005's Box Set features, mostly, re-recorded songs. The songs found on the Box Set that he recorded throughout the 1990s for Curb Records are the original recordings. The re-recordings of his hit songs for the music videos he did in the '90s are found in their audio form on this collection. There are six songs that were previously unreleased on CD and make their debut: "Driver's Education", "Family Funeral Fight", "Kitty Cat's Revenge", "When The Kids Are Gone", "The Cat Song", and "Hello Mama". A seventh recording, "We're Havin' a Baby the Natural Way", had previously been released as a CD single but wasn't part of any album until Box Set. The 2011 release, Bozo's Back Again, features re-recordings from Ray of various love ballads that he'd recorded over the decades. There was a previously unreleased song on the CD, "Priceless", and a re-recording of a song he wrote for the Cannonball Run soundtrack in 1981, "Just for the Hell of It". The closing track, "Ruby Falls", had been released as an Mp3 in 2007 but it had never appeared on any album until Bozo's Back Again.
As you can see Ray hasn't released a studio album since the 2016 Christmas CD. A lot of his time and energy was at first spent on the production of his television series, Ray Stevens' Nashville, which premiered in November 2015 and then his focus was spent on the construction of his showroom, CabaRay. The television series changed it's name, slightly, to Ray Stevens' CabaRay Nashville in January 2017. The CabaRay opened up in 2018. In numerous interviews he gave between the years of 2016 through 2019 he spoke of having a backlog of recordings for future albums but as of May 1, 2020 there hasn't been a new project from Ray on the market. The COVID-19 pandemic, of course, has put everything at a standstill as far as entertainment goes and so perhaps once this is all behind us a new album or song from Ray will emerge! If it happens I'll blog about it!
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