May 13, 2020

Ray Stevens: Singling Out Speed Ball...

Me and Ray Stevens 1963 single
This is something of new series of blog entries I'll be posting periodically. They'll all be titled 'Singling Out' because the point of the series is to spotlight a single from Ray Stevens at random. This being the first blog entry and since it's spotlighting "Speed Ball" then this blog entry has the title 'Singling Out Speed Ball'. Get it? No, no hold back your applause...it's not that clever!! Seriously, though, I think the image is a bit too large, even though the photo program states that it's medium size, but if I were reduce it's size to 'small' it would be too tiny. This is my vinyl copy of a 1963 Ray Stevens novelty single, "Speed Ball". The song is based on a 'Brother' Dave Gardner routine about a motorcycle. If you've heard any number of comedy routines by 'Brother' Dave then you'll notice the influence he had on the very early novelty songs by Ray Stevens. There were phrases heard in numerous 'Brother' Dave recordings that made their way into some of Ray's songs...and the fact that Ray could deliver a line reminiscent of 'Brother' Dave was the icing on the cake. The single hit in the fall of 1963 and was featured on Ray's 1963 album, This is Ray Stevens. The novelty spent a brief three weeks on the national Hot 100 and the Rhythm and Blues chart...all within the month of October. In fact, "Speed Ball" debuted at it's peak position on the Rhythm and Blues chart but over on the Hot 100 pop chart it had what I'd consider a suspicious chart life. It debuted on the chart the week ending October 12, 1963. In it's second week it leaped a whopping 17 notches (jumping from 81 to 64). In it's third week it climbed to 59 where it peaked. The suspicion aroused by me centers around why the single abruptly vanished from the Hot 100 after two weeks of upward movement? To debut at 81 and then jump to 59 by week number three certainly tells me that it was hitting with the public but yet on the chart dated November 2, 1963 it's nowhere to be found on the entire Hot 100. I don't know if the chart had some sort of obscure rule dictating that singles had to be above a certain position by it's third week or what...but ever since I found out that the single vanished while it was showing signs of reaching an audience (I discovered this fact years ago when I purchased a chart book by Joel Whitburn) but ever since I came across the information of the short chart life of "Speed Ball" in spite of upward chart movement it's made me suspicious of just how subjective the music popularity charts truly were/are...more specifically how poorly Ray's music was treated by disc jockeys in general.

Me and Ray Stevens 1963 single
Off to the right is me with an overly excited facial expression because "It's Party Time"...not necessarily to be taken literally...but nevertheless the B-side of "Speed Ball" is the ballad "It's Party Time". I decided to make that image small just so you can see how tiny it is...the image above is medium size. The plot of the song revisits some of the drama that Ray sang about on another one of his earlier ballads, "Funny Man"; this time around "It's Party Time" tells the story of a man that throws a party just for the distinct purpose of telling the crowd that the woman he loves left him for his best friend during a previous party...but he reassures himself that he doesn't really care and encourages the rest of the people attending the party to drink, be merry, and have a fun ole time as he attempts to convince himself that he doesn't care she's left him. The melodrama is a far cry from the frenetic A-side novelty, "Speed Ball". It's a shame that disc jockeys didn't flip the single over and discover "It's Party Time". This is the earliest vinyl single I have in my personal collection of Ray Stevens items. I don't have a lot of his vinyl singles but I have all of his studio albums in one format or another (vinyl, cassette, CD, Mp3).

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