January 12, 2021

Ray Stevens sings "Such a Night"...

Well, here I am once again and I'm writing a blog entry about Ray Stevens. Are you a serious collector of Ray Stevens music? I have a lot of vinyl albums, vinyl singles, cassette tapes, CDs, and digital downloads of Ray Stevens in my personal music collection. I also have several trinkets and memorabilia. I asked that question because the main topic of this blog entry is the Ray Stevens recording of "Such a Night". I should be a little more technical...it's a performance of "Such a Night". The recording happened in 1982 and it's on his studio album, Don't Laugh Now. The album came at a time when Ray was intentionally focusing on the serious, ballad side of his recording career. It's something he had always focused on during the majority of his recording career...but he would eventually market himself comedy beginning in 1984. He would continue, every so often, to release serious recordings...he even does so to this day...but from 1984 onward the comedy aspect of his recording career has dominated. 


The video comes from a concert he gave in 2015 during what was billed as the Here We Go Again! tour. He had released his memoir the previous year and if I recall correctly you could have your book autographed after the concert during the photograph/autograph session. The tour was named after his comedy album that year...the one that features "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me" on it. "Such a Night" is typically what Ray opens his concerts with. I don't know how long it's been his opening number...he performed it at the couple of concerts I've been fortunate enough to attend. The song goes back to the rock and roll sounds of the 1950s...and when you hear the music arrangement you'll discover it immediately. One of Ray's favorite rhythm and blues groups, The Drifters, recorded the song in 1953 and that's the rendition Ray likely became familiar with. Their rendition was issued in January 1954 and it eventually climbed into the Top-10 of the Rhythm and Blues chart. Ray often makes a point to specify that he was influenced by The Drifters when the lead singer was Clyde McPhatter, a singer who also previously recorded with another rhythm and blues group, The Dominoes, that Ray has previously cited as an influence (along side Ray Charles, Hank Williams, Spike Jones, and The Coasters). Johnny Ray had a number one with "Such a Night" in England in 1954. Elvis Presley recorded his version of the song in 1960 and had a hit with it, too. The song's been recorded by numerous recording artists over the years. Ray titled one of his DVD releases, Such a Night: 50 Years of Hits and Hilarity. Yes, the opening number of the concert was "Such a Night". 

The concert footage was taped at The Welk Theater in Branson, Missouri in 2010. The title of the DVD was in reference to 2010 being the 50th anniversary of the Ray Stevens novelty single, "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon", which had become the first single of Ray's to attract national attention. He had been recording since 1957 but in 1960 "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" had began gaining traction as a regional hit...and as it gained national momentum it also attracted the lawyers of King Features Syndicate, the company that owned the rights to the character 'Sgt. Preston', and they threatened a lawsuit if the record company, NRC, didn't pull all copies of the song off the market. The single was charting nationally just below Billboard magazine's Hot 100...there used to be a 25 position chart filled with songs that hadn't broken into the national music scene, yet, and the songs were said to be Bubbling Under the Hot 100 if they made an appearance there...the near-hit in 1960 inspired him to focus on novelty material to gain national attention and so he did! However, as the video above demonstrates, Ray Stevens sings any type of music. 

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