We're almost finished with the first month of 2021 and one of the milestones happening this year is the 35th anniversary of Surely You Joust. The comedy album from Ray Stevens was released in 1986...it was his third studio album for MCA Records and it became another top selling album for him. Earlier in 1986 he had the honor of hitting number one on the Billboard Country Album chart with I Have Returned, a comedy album released in the latter half of 1985. Ray's comedy albums were like mountain climbers...they would make their debut midway on the album chart or somewhere near the bottom of the chart and then climb up to their peak position. After the creation of SoundScan in 1991 where point of sale documentation became computerized, and immediate, it ushered in the era of albums peaking on the charts within their first or second week of availability. Ray's 1984 and 1985 albums made their debuts on the Country Album chart in the final months of those years but neither album reached their peak until several months into the next year. Surely You Joust came along in the fall of 1986 and reached it's peak within the same calendar year...peaking just outside the Top-10. Surely You Joust made it's debut on the Billboard Country Album chart for the week ending September 13, 1986 and then the following week it was among the Top-40 best selling country albums...knocking on the door at the Top-20 on the September 20, 1986 chart. "The People's Court", one of the comedy songs from the album, reached it's peak on the Billboard Country Singles chart in the very same September 20th issue. Surely You Joust made it into the Top-20 the week ending September 27, 1986. It remained in the Top-20 for several weeks...reaching it's peak in late October 1986. When Surely You Joust made it's debut on the country album chart on September 13, 1986 Ray's previous album from 1985, I Have Returned, was still on the album chart...at that time it was in it's 46th chart week. Something of note about 1986 is it was the first year that the readers of Music City News magazine voted Ray Stevens as Comedian of the Year. He would repeat that win throughout the rest of the decade and into the next. He won the award 9 consecutive years (1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1994).
The album's second single release was the most commercially successful of the three that were issued from the album. "Southern Air" is a trio recording featuring Ray, Jerry Clower, and Minnie Pearl. The three country comics are on a flight, "Southern Air", going from Hahira, Georgia to Yazoo City, Mississippi. In the recording Ray plays the part of the story-teller/narrator/singer while Jerry Clower plays the role of the pilot and Minnie Pearl plays the role of the stewardess. The lyrics of the song feature all sorts of southern culture, deliberately, and several characters and expressions from the stories of Jerry Clower are woven into the storyline. "Southern Air" made it's debut on Billboard's Country Singles chart on November 1, 1986 and it peaked the following week...spending two weeks in it's peak position on the Country Singles chart on the charts published the week ending November 8, 1986 and November 15, 1986. It's short-lived appearance wasn't the end of the single, however. "Southern Air" appeared on Billboard's Country Single Sales chart on November 29, 1986. The album's third single, "Can He Love You Half as Much as I?", didn't make the Country Singles chart when it was issued early in 1987. MCA Records, the label he was with beginning in 1984, featured "Can He Love You Half as Much as I?" on a couple of further compilation releases and Ray kept the song in concert set-list and over the course of time it became just as popular with his fans as anything else he's recorded. The ironic thing about that song is not only didn't it reach the singles charts but it's appeared on more compilation albums representing 1986 in the career of Ray Stevens...instead of either of the two singles that reached the chart from the 1986 album: "The People's Court" and "Southern Air". Ray made a music video for "Can He Love You Half as Much as I?" in 1995 and then produced a limited animation music video of the song the following decade. Surely You Joust is one of the classic albums in Ray's career...so Happy 35th Anniversary!
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