Hello all once again!! As we wait in anticipation for the release of the brand new Ray Stevens album let's take a look at a love ballad that he recorded for his 1982 album, Don't Laugh Now. This album was released on RCA Records and it was a blend of mid-tempo songs, up-tempo songs, and ballads. I have it on vinyl and cassette tape. "Written Down In My Heart" was the album's first single release and it reached the Country Top-40. The song comes from the pen of a writer credited as W.T. Davidson. I looked him up and there's only a couple of songs credited to the writer...and it's Ray's song that was the biggest hit for the writer. Now, the website I looked at only focuses on single releases...so it's hard to tell if the writer had any album cuts by recording artists. An album cut, or album track, is what's referred to as a song that appears on an album but wasn't released commercially as a single.
The song, as you can tell if you're listening to it as you read, is a love ballad. It was released as a single in February 1982. RCA even released a gold color vinyl promo single...copies of it can sometimes be found on eBay and images of it can be found on websites that specialize in vinyl singles. The performance comes from Ray's appearance on Barbara Mandrell's television show, Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters. I created a four panel collage of Ray's 1982 album. I feature an image of the vinyl, cassette, and an image of myself and my copy of the cassette. As mentioned I have Don't Laugh Now on vinyl, too, but reaching for the cassette is a lot simpler than having to sift through my stack of vinyl. Ray has a sensitivity or a softness in his vocal performance...there were several displays of this throughout the 1982 album and in several album's prior...but it reached it's peak on this 1982 album. It may have had to do with the overall production that drew out that kind of vocalization from Ray. It's anyone's guess.
When you take a look at the collage below you'll notice that there's more graphics/art work on the vinyl release. The neon '50s style rock and roll look with the splashy Don't Laugh Now written in that manner was something of a tie-in with the song's opening track...the bouncy rock and roll flavored "Such a Night". There are several rock and roll inspired performances on here...musically speaking of course...Ray remains calm and pleasant vocally. In addition to "Such a Night" there's "Always There" and "Take That Girl Away". The love ballads are "Written Down In My Heart", "Don't Laugh Now", "This Old Piano", "Oh, Leo Lady", and "Why Don't We Go Somewhere and Make Love". There is one mid-tempo song on here, "Country Boy, Country Club Girl", and then there's the album's second single, "Where The Sun Don't Shine", done in a hand clapping sing-a-long southern gospel arrangement which belies the fact it's a humorous song about a romantic break-up. The cassette tape, if you notice, lacks the '50s style neon look and places the album's title and song publicity underneath Ray's photo. I've got a cassette copy of his 1980 album, too...I've always been on the look out for a cassette version of his 1981 album to complete the RCA studio albums in cassette format. Bob Montgomery co-produced this album with Ray. Also, the album's keyboard player, Ron Oates, arranged "This Old Piano", "Written Down In My Heart", and "Why Don't We Go Somewhere and Make Love". Ray arranged the other seven songs on the album.
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