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1963 "Funny Man" single |
Hello all and welcome to another installment in this
Singling Out series of blog entries. In the first installment of the series I spotlighted a 1963 single from Ray Stevens titled "
Speed Ball" backed with "
It's Party Time" and I've singled out several other recordings from my Ray Stevens collection since then. This "
Funny Man" single was purchased at a local flea market and finding it among the singles was something of a surprise considering most, if not all, dealers that sell vinyl albums and singles at flea markets concentrate on rock and roll records. The dealer's cubicle, as I call it, had a lot of vinyl singles randomly lined up in plastic bins on half a dozen tables. There were boxes of vinyl albums placed on other tables. Anyway, I purchased "
Funny Man" there. If you notice there's some graffiti on the label. Whoever previously owned the single felt the need to circle, in blue ink, the single's running time. It's a promo copy re-release...which is rare in and of itself. This promo copy, according to on-line sources, was released by Mercury Records in 1968. The catalog number is 72816. The promo single of "
Funny Man" issued by Mercury in 1963 has a green colored label and it's catalog number is 72098. The song is a love ballad...and it would probably have fit the description of angst and heartbreak. Ray sings of a man with a reputation of being a comic and playing it so well in public that it hides underlying feelings of sorrow. He would tackle this theme in a different kind of presentation with "
It's Party Time". "
Funny Man" reached the Hot 100 in the U.S. and was a regional hit in Canada. Pop radio stations used to conduct their own countdowns based on listener requests in case you're wondering what 'regional hit' means.
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1963 B-side of "Funny Man" |
The B-side has some graffiti on it as well. The Mercury Records logo at the top is filled in with a red marker by a previous owner. Now, if I were to see this single listed on-line and it had markings on it, I wouldn't even bother purchasing it...but since it was at a flea market and chances are on-line sellers may ask a high price for this single, whether there's markings on it or not, I decided to buy it. The B-side is another love ballad and it's titled "
Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". In this particular ballad, which is heavier on strings and production than "
Funny Man", Ray sings of a relationship that's fallen apart. The song is a character study of a man who tries to convince himself that he no longer cares about a woman and he minimizes her leaving him as "
Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". The songs on this single come from Ray's second studio album,
This is Ray Stevens. In the previous paragraph I mentioned that this is a re-release of the 1963 promo single of "
Funny Man" and "
Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". The irony of Mercury Records deciding to re-issue the 1963 recordings on a vinyl single in 1968 could have been in response to the fact that Ray re-recorded "
Funny Man" for his 1968 Monument album,
Even Stevens, but with a completely different arrangement. It's hard to tell why Mercury re-issued a promo and regular copy of "
Funny Man" in 1968 but re-issue it they did...and the promo re-issue is in my collection.
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