The photo above shows Ray in a relaxed mood inside a previous recording studio. This 1974 photo originated from the studio he opened on 1707 Grand Avenue the same year. He closed it down in 2019 after a run of 45 years while a new recording studio was being built within his CabaRay facility. If you search the archives of my blog in the year 2019 you'll come across a blog entry I wrote titled: 45 Grand (Avenue) Years: 1974-2019. If you notice both photos are in black and white...and if you also notice there's a change in technology, too. The console in the 2020 photo looks just as complex but you'll also notice that there's a computer screen on the console and Ray's holding a cell phone. In the 1974 photo there's no computer, that's visible, and a phone is sitting on top of the console next to an ash tray. The presence of the telephone in 1974 compared to a cell phone in 2020...and the visibility of a computer in the 2020 photo...are technological differences that stand out right away when comparing the photos.
The reason I say there's no computer visible in the 1974 photo is because Ray has always been innovative when it comes to recording equipment and technology. Ray, in fact, may have add early models of a computer in his recording studio along side all of the other equipment but there isn't a visual of a computer in the 1974 photo. Did you ever notice why Ray's recordings always sounded a whole lot different than anyone else? It isn't because most of them were comical. It's because of the music execution and the production values. When you hear Ray Stevens singing a ballad like "Idaho Wine" (from his 1973 Losin' Streak album) or "Golden Age" (from his 1973 Nashville album) the music, arrangement, production is all Ray Stevens...no other recording artist had the same sound. Ray continues to have his own sound to this day. In the black and white photo off to the right it's a more close-up of Ray at the console. When I came across this photo several years ago it wasn't dated. Whenever I see a photo of Ray and it isn't dated I go through a mental process of elimination based on what he looks like or what he might be wearing. In this photo he has the thick dark hair and based on the pose it looks like he's got the thinner beard. He had a thicker beard in the mid '70s...search YouTube for video clips of him from 1975 performing "Misty" or "Indian Love Call" to see what I mean. He had a thinner beard in the early '70s and there's YouTube video of him from 1972 on the television show, Hee Haw, if you want to know what I call a thin beard. However, the style of beard in this photo combined with the casual attire reminiscent of his photo on the 1981 One More Last Chance album has me thinking the close-up photo is from 1981...but it's highly possible it could be from 1980, 1982, 1983...but it's definitely the early '80s. If anyone knows for certain what year that photo originated I'd love to know! A brief interview of Ray at his former recording studio back in 2014...he talks about purchasing an upright piano at a music store in 1960 and taking it to the NRC recording studio. You can hear the brief interview, from July 2014, when you click HERE.
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