It's me once more!! I checked the Amazon site earlier today and my customer review of the 50th anniversary recording of "Everything is Beautiful" was published. I was beginning to wonder if it would get published given that I'd written it a few hours after I purchased the Mp3 on October 30th. Now then, all I'm awaiting is the review I wrote of the "Everything is Beautiful" / "United We Stand" medley to show up on the Amazon site. Perhaps it'll appear later today or sometime tomorrow. The Mp3 of "Everything is Beautiful" can be purchased on Amazon by clicking HERE. Awareness for the single was created through a couple of Ray's social media accounts but it lacked a YouTube clip promoting the Mp3's availability even though a promo clip was posted on Ray's Facebook page. The YouTube video clips from Ray Stevens tend to be the ones that are picked up and shared throughout the internet. I don't exactly know why. It may have something to do with the URL coding of Facebook video content compared to YouTube video coding or it simply might be the fact that YouTube is a video hosting site whereas Facebook is a community where the overall majority on that platform post messages rather than deliberately look up videos to watch. I know it's a pain to embed video content from Facebook on here...that's why I embed YouTube video.
As you see off to the left hand side of the screen Ray Stevens was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame last year. He was part of the Class of 2019 which also included Brooks and Dunn along with record producer Jerry Bradley. Ray's election to this particular Hall of Fame was a long time coming...long overdue...but finally it happened. There's been a long and lengthy battle for generations when it comes to the measure of a recording artist's popularity or impact. You can be a recording artist with tens of millions of records sold and more often than not those kinds of statistics will ensure Hall of Fame placement at some point. Like in baseball or Pro football, their Halls of Fame typically factor in statistics like total amount of hits, home runs, doubles, triples...if it's a pitcher the number of strikeouts, complete games, shut out's, perfect games...in football it's typically how many touchdown passes and how many yards a quarterback, running back, or wide receiver accumulated. On the defensive side of football, statistics for how many sacks did someone on the defensive line get on an opposing quarterback, or, how many forced fumbles or interceptions a defensive player induced. In addition to the stats of athletes being a factor in Hall of Fame voting there's also the conversation of whether or not a baseball player either made it to the World Series or had any kind of positive impact in a World Series in their career...in football it applies to the Super Bowl. If you "get a ring", as the slang expression goes when describing winning a championship, then that's almost a definite sign you'll be in the Hall of Fame one day. Baseball's Hall of Fame is in Cooperstown, New York and the Pro Football Hall of Fame is in Canton, Ohio. When it comes to the Country Music Hall of Fame there's certain rules and criteria, too, but they're not overly strict when it comes to the statistics. In country music as is the case in all forms of recorded music when we use the word 'statistics' we're referring to record sales, awards won, total number of hit albums and hit singles, concert ticket sales, etc.
The Country Music Hall of Fame recognizes recording artists for those achievements, obviously, but they don't make it mandatory for inclusion into the Hall of Fame. You don't have to be a recording artist with tens of millions of albums sold or have a boatload of number one hits or even have that many hit records at all. You can find yourself a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame simply on your talents and the contributions you've made to the music industry...whether those contributions are widely known or only known to a select few. Ray Stevens fits largely into the latter category even though he's had his share of hit songs, hit albums, multi-platinum video productions, and his on-line video content has reached millions upon millions of people. Those accomplishments are the more widely known but there's an entirely different side of his career that's rooted behind the scenes and inside recording studios that once existed up and down Music Row in the '60s and early '70s. He's been a session musician and played on a wide variety of recordings for other artists. In addition to that he's a songwriter, song publisher, music arranger, and producer. He produced and arranged the music for recording acts on Monument Records and several low-budget Independent labels throughout the '60s. He produces and arranges his own recordings and up until sometime last year he recorded his songs in his own recording studio down on Music Row. He's since built and is recording in his new studio within the walls of his CabaRay showroom. This 50th anniversary rendition of "Everything is Beautiful" was recorded at Ray's CabaRay studio.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...