October 4, 2020

Ray Stevens audio clip: "Poison Ivy"...

Hello all Ray Stevens fans!! In this blog entry I'm embedding one of the recent uploads on Ray's YouTube channel. The upload is an audio track of his recording of "Poison Ivy"...Ray recorded the song during sessions for his Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. This box set was released in February of 2012 and so the recording could have taken place anywhere during the latter half of 2009 on into the midway point of 2011. In a lot of Ray's interviews in the first half of 2012 he mentioned that he worked on the box set for two years and so I'd say he began recording the songs at some point late 2009 and all through 2010 and 2011...which if I'm accurate on the time line it obviously means that the box set was being put together simultaneously while he was being discovered by a whole host of people on-line through his politically charged YouTube music videos. In 2010 and 2011 he issued two politically themed CDs: We The People and Spirit of '76. When you see Ray speaking in interviews or read any of the interviews and he makes mention that he's constantly working...it isn't an exaggeration...he's ALWAYS working/recording even if the music won't be publicly heard for several years time. In more recent interviews he's remarked that he has an entire backlog of recordings just waiting to get released...and he'll be in charge of the timing and planning of what music gets unleashed first...and we can't wait. 

The Coasters are one of Ray's all-time favorite music groups...read any professional biography in an assortment of CD liner notes or inside magazines and you're likely to see The Coasters listed as one of his primary influences. Ray had already shown his love of the group in 1969 when he recorded "Along Came Jones", "Little Egypt", and "Yakety Yak". The Coasters were contemporaries of Ray Stevens...they weren't a group that he grew up hearing on the radio...but Ray nevertheless loved their music and it's interesting to point out that when Ray issued his first single in 1957, "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon", he was doing his vocal impression of Coasters lead singer, Billy Guy, but that's just my opinion. Ray has never officially stated that he was doing an impression...but I happen to think he was. "Poison Ivy", for The Coasters, was a gigantic hit for them in 1959. It was their third hit...following "Charlie Brown" and "Along Came Jones". By the way, Ray recorded a version of "Charlie Brown", "Searchin'", and other Coasters songs for 2012's Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. Historians say that while The Coasters were huge with rhythm and blues fans and their music was all over rhythm and blues radio stations, "Poison Ivy" put them into what historians call 'the mainstream' which I take it was their way of saying until "Poison Ivy" came along The Coasters weren't known outside of the rhythm and blues audience. 

Ray overdubs his own voice to make it sound like it's a group singing "Poison Ivy". It's a great rendition in my biased opinion. Here is Ray's audio recording of that song...

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