Well, well, well...it's me once again!! I've just finished listening to and taking notes about the brand new Ray Stevens album, Great Country Ballads. The album had several surprises as far as instrumentation is concerned. If you're going into this with the mindset that it's going to be a wild, zany vocal display of mayhem and comedy then you'll be surprised by the seriousness with which he performs these 12 songs. The album's title should be a clue for those unaware of what lay in store on this album...you'll be treated to 12 ballads performed with updated arrangements by Ray Stevens. I took notes on all of the songs but I'm not going to critique each and every song. I mainly took notes, out of habit, so I could look to them when writing my review. The digital download opens with "Please Help Me, I'm Falling". Ray establishes how 98 percent of the album will sound with this opening track. He lowers the tempo from what most may recall from the original by Hank Locklin. Ray puts in a lot of soul and rhythm and blues flavor before bringing it to it's climax. To my ears those are the sounds that Ray is generating on the recording...some may consider it smooth jazz.
His rendition of "Crazy" is similar to how he performed it in the late 1990s on an episode of the country music show, Primetime Country. That performance is on YouTube. The song comes from the pen of Willie Nelson and it was a huge hit for Patsy Cline and it was a hit for Emmylou Harris and later, Reba McEntire. His take on "City Lights" is unlike any version previously available...from the pen of Bill Anderson it became a hit for Ray Price and later, Mickey Gilley, and Bill himself recorded a version of it a couple of times over the decades. Ray Stevens gives it a sung-narration feel and he's over-dubbed his own voice to create a background harmony. He does this on several other recordings but the bulk of the harmony singing on the album comes from his usual female group. The thing about a digital download is there's no musician credits or who the harmony singers are...no credits for the engineer, publishers, songwriters, production team (even though it's safe to assume the entire album was produced and arranged by Ray Stevens). Curb Records has the audio clips of Ray's songs on YouTube already. I've embedded the audio of "City Lights"...
When you listen to the album you'll notice that there's a recurring saxophone solo that pops up in most of the songs. The saxophonist may be Denis Solee or it could be Buddy Skipper. I'll try and find out who the musicians are. We may have to wait until June for the CD copy to become available. You can tell that Ray is thoroughly enjoying himself as he goes from song to song putting his spin on these classics. The belting out of "Bouquet of Roses", for example, and the over-dubbed harmony and the saxophone solo...it all comes together to highlight even further that this album is every much the music arranger's joy as it is the singer's joy...and in this case the music arranger and singer are one in the same! The album is titled Great Country Classics but they're presented in a very different way and you'll notice this right away with the opening track on through much of the album. "Room Full of Roses" is one of the songs that features a saxophone solo and the song's tempo is not like the rendition popularized by Mickey Gilley. In Ray's rendition there is no piano pounding and boogie woogie overtones...instead there's a softer delivery and there's piano but nothing like what you'd hear in the up-tempo version. I had heard Ray's rendition of "Your Cheatin' Heart" on YouTube...he put out a sneak preview audio clip that I embedded in a previous blog entry. It was the only song, to that point, that ended with a mid-tempo conclusion. The album lives up to it's title as ballad heavy.
Now, then, when you hear "Making Believe" come across your speaker I believe you'll also feel the way I did. As soon as I heard the intro and the opening lyrics I immediately felt that this may be treated as a future single release. By that I mean it may become a song Ray frequently highlights whenever he goes back to putting on concerts. It just has that sound that makes one think it's possibly going to be one of the songs used for publicity/promotion. It features dobro and fiddle...the first appearance of those instruments on this album. The rendition of "Sweet Dreams" was probably recorded during the same session as it, too, features dobro, violins, and a saxophone! The closing song, his rendition of "Till I Get It Right" is fabulous. It's slower than the original by Tammy Wynette. The album, overall, is a great showcase of Ray's music arranging skills and his vocalizations. It's a ballad heavy album and so this shouldn't be a surprise to anyone considering the album's title. It's the first of four all new albums that are to be released on Ray Stevens this year. The next album arrives late in March and it'll be a lot more up-tempo by it's very nature considering it's going to be a Bluegrass album.
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