October 21, 2020

Ray Stevens: Hilarious Halloween...

It's something of a tradition to write a Ray Stevens blog entry with a Halloween theme. Ray has recorded a few songs that either tie into Halloween or he's recorded songs whose titles fit the occasion. If we go back to 1964 there's a novelty song on the B-side of "Bubble Gum the Bubble Dancer" called "Laughing Over My Grave". The single was issued by Mercury Records. The A-side or B-side of this single wasn't part of any Ray Stevens album in the early '60s. The A-side began showing up on compilation albums released by Mercury Records and their subsidiary labels in the late '60s. The B-side was never issued on any future album until a Halloween themed various artists collection came along many decades later. If you search Amazon's digital music department you won't find "Laughing Over My Grave" available as an Mp3 anymore. That Halloween various artists compilation isn't available for purchase anymore. Ray uploaded an audio of the song on YouTube last year. 


In the earlier recordings from Ray Stevens he did what I'd call textbook novelty songs. As time has passed a lot of music historians and listeners, in general, have labeled any song with a comical overtone as 'novelty' but in reality that label applies to certain types of songs. A song based on a current trend or a fad is described as a novelty song because the subject matter is tied to something that's seen as a novelty (something unusual)...it doesn't mean a novelty song is automatically going to be laugh out loud comical. Anyway, "Laughing Over My Grave" would be considered something of a novelty record even though it's not humorous when you listen to it. The laughing that you hear is jarring but it's also comical. 

The 1964 recording was produced by Shelby Singleton as you can see on the image in the video embed. Ray wrote the song and he also wrote the A-side, "Bubble Gum the Bubble Dancer". At the time of this single's release Ray was signed to Monument Records as a music arranger and session musician while Mercury Records continued to control the release of his audio recordings. In 1965 Ray released two Halloween style novelty records on Mercury Records: "Rockin' Teenage Mummies" and "Mr. Baker the Undertaker".


As you can see this novelty record was produced by Shelby Singleton and Jerry Kennedy. Ray, to date, hasn't uploaded an audio clip of "Mr. Baker the Undertaker" and so I uploaded an audio clip of the song by some other YouTube member. It's audio is top quality as if it's been digitally remastered but I haven't seen any CD or Mp3 of this recording...so I don't know how the audio got cleaned up without much vinyl scratches or hissing detected. In the meantime "The Rockin' Teenage Mummies" was uploaded onto the Ray Stevens YouTube channel last year, too. This particular novelty revisits the Arabic theme and cadence of "Ahab the Arab" but this time around Ray tells us about a rock group, The Mummies, who wear band-aids instead of cloth rags...and one member of the group moans in displeasure when the screaming girls trying to rip the band-aids off. 'Ouch!!!!'. 


Now then...those early/mid '60s Halloween style novelty records were peculiar and off-the-wall. Ray and Buddy Kalb came up with what might be the quintessential Halloween novelty in 1988. If given a fair hearing it could rival "Monster Mash" and "Monster's Holiday". In 1988 Ray recorded "The Booger Man"...within the lyrics of the song Ray name drops a series of famous monsters and ghoulish creatures. By song's end we're informed that a man and a woman are out on a date. They're sitting inside a car...parked in the woods...and the man warns his girlfriend that "The Booger Man" may be out there and so she better slide even closer for protection against the creature. The song, as you'll hear, has a heavy harmonica presence and Ray vocally delivers the song in a bluesy rendition. Watch out...the Booger Man's gonna get'cha! 

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