Oh hello...I'm writing a second blog entry of the day and in this one I'm focusing on a September 1978 concert review that appeared in a publication called The Chattahoochee Magazine. The article/review, specifically, appeared on September 3, 1978 and it was written by an author named Whit Perry. The magazine, I assume, was sold as an extra feature within the newspaper being sold in Columbus, Georgia at the time. Regional TV Guides used to accompany the newspaper in this area and so I'm thinking The Chattahoochee Magazine was one of those kinds of publications. In case you're wondering I hadn't found out any information about the publication on-line so it must've been the kind of publication that I'm assuming it to be. I wouldn't have known of this publication's existence had it not been for a 1978 Ray Stevens concert review being shared on-line today through his social media sites. The review singles out a lot of things that took place during Ray's concert and the author shares some quotes from the stand-up comedy Ray interspersed into the concert. He notes how some of the lyrics are changed in the "Misty" performance. The author also provides a backstory of Ray's rise to fame and how "Ahab the Arab" made him a nationally known performer. The author writes of Ray's parents and brother greeting Ray once he walks off-stage and into the media area. The article, as mentioned, comes from a September 1978 publication and the thing that caught my eye is the caricatured illustration of Ray has him clean shaven. One would think the bearded look of Ray, as you see on the 1978 album Be Your Own Best Friend, would've been the most familiar Ray Stevens image when this article was published...but the artist chose a clean shaven depiction of Ray Stevens to accompany the article...
The signature of the caricaturist is scribbled underneath the image and I can't figure out the artist's name...but the caricature of Ray Stevens sitting on Clyde the camel accompanies the concert review from September 1978. You can read the 1978 article/review when you visit Ray's Facebook PAGE. If you're reading this blog entry after January 14th then, of course, once you open Ray's Facebook page search for his January 14th posts and you'll come across The Chattahoochee Magazine images. When you click on the Facebook image, right click, and then select 'open image in new tab'. Once you do that you can magnify/enlarge the article and you can read what Whit Perry wrote. He dissects the entire concert and mentions that during a gospel music segment of the concert Ray makes mention of church groups he used to listen to and he spoke of people named Thurman and Virgil. This review coming in September 1978 that means it's several years before Ray recorded "The Dooright Family", in 1980, a satiric spoof of southern gospel performers. Yes, in that song, for those that haven't heard it, two of the characters are named Brother Thurman and Brother Virgil. So, for me, reading the concert review was a revelation. Also, the author mentions several songs Ray performed...including the elaborate performances of "Ahab the Arab" and "The Streak". The author mentions that Ray got the audience into fits of laughter at one point in the concert before turning abruptly serious with a performance of "Mr. Businessman". Interestingly the author never made mention of "Everything is Beautiful" being performed. He writes that Ray opened the show with "Can't Stop Dancin'" and closed the show with "Goodnight, Sweetheart" as an encore but didn't mention whether or not Ray sang "Everything is Beautiful". I'm sure Ray included it in his concerts at that time...but to not see it mentioned in a concert review is odd. Something else that caught my attention is there isn't any reference to Ray's 1976 Top-20 hit, "You Are So Beautiful", which I thought would've been part of the concert set-list during that period of Ray's career.
Ray was signed to Warner Brothers at the time of this concert...and within the concert review it was mentioned that Ray spoke of Flav-O-Rich, a dairy company that he was a spokesman for from the mid 1970s into the mid 1980s. Meanwhile, the caricature of Ray is very good in case I hadn't mentioned so already. It's difficult to find concert reviews of Ray from this period of his career. I've done all kinds of on-line searches during the last 10 plus years and occasionally I'll come across a stray concert review in the on-line archives of newspapers from the early or mid '70s or the mid '80s but that's about it. I rarely find a thorough concert review like the one Whit Perry authored in September 1978.
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