March 26, 2021

Ray Stevens: My Review of "Melancholy Fescue"...

Ray Stevens has released the second of his four all-new albums. This one, Melancholy Fescue, contains 12 songs with a Bluegrass flavor. The songs are from the pop music field and they span decades. When you listen to the album you'll find yourself, on many of the songs, grinning. The sound and tempo of Bluegrass is usually upbeat and this particular album lives up to those expectations. In a previous blog entry I wondered if the opening track, "Ruby/Ruby Baby", was a medley featuring a hit by the Osbourne Brothers. Once I heard the medley I learned that "Ruby" being performed here by Ray Stevens was once recorded by Ray Charles. "Ruby Baby", the second half of the medley, was a Rhythm and Blues hit for The Drifters, a pop hit for Dion, and a country hit for Billy 'Crash' Craddock. Throughout this digital album Ray tackles a lot of songs that you wouldn't expect to hear in a Bluegrass way. There's a lot of banjo work on this album but there isn't an abundance of lead banjo if you understand what I'm getting at. In traditional Bluegrass performances you'll hear the banjo and or mandolin prominently out front of the other instruments. In some of the performances on here the banjo is more of an accompaniment to musically compliment the other instrumentation. In some of the songs you'll hear dobro, fiddle, and steel guitars in addition to mandolins and banjos. If you look at the track list of this album you'll marvel at the variety of songs that Ray's decided to transform into Bluegrass. I pointed out in a previous blog entry that "Oh, Pretty Woman" is a song Ray had performed at the Grand Ole Opry nearly 10 years ago. This album's been in the planning stages for a number of years and to see it finally get released is exciting...the music is flawless and the arrangements and the instrumentation Ray infuses these songs with is delicious. 

Track three is a medley of two different songs with the same title but very different arrangements and delivery. "In the Still of the Night / In the Still of the Night" combines the 1937 pop hit by Nelson Eddy (written by Cole Porter) with the rhythm and blues hit in 1956 by The Five Satins. Ray incorporates the traditional doo-wop vocal accompaniment when he gets to The Five Satins portion of the medley. The collection contains mostly his versions of pop songs from the 1930s to the 1960s...but there's one song on here that came along much later in the early 1980s called "At This Moment". It's not a song you'd expect to find Ray Stevens cover...and yet that's why he did it. The original recording was by pop singer, Billy Vera. When I seen the track list of Ray's album I thought I'd never heard "At This Moment" before and yet once Ray started singing it I was reminded of the song but back then I didn't recognize it's title or who originally sang it. 

Do you have a 1975 episode of Pop! Goes the Country guest starring Ray Stevens in your personal collections? If you have, as I do, you'll recognize the arrangement heard on "Twilight Time". Ray sang it as a Bluegrass song on that 1975 episode although this 2021 album is where an official recording of it makes it's debut. Track 6 is a song that you should all be familiar with...Ray's recording of "Unchained Melody". Ray uploaded the music video onto YouTube in October 2013 and so you should be very familiar with Ray's version of the song by now. The mood up till now had been kept light and up-tempo and then comes track 7, "Spring Is Here". In actuality spring is here...we're in late March...but this song is about loneliness during a time when, historically, love is in the air following months of cold, wintery weather. Another pop music standard, "Sophisticated Lady", is heard next, followed by "People". I had never heard "At This Moment", "Spring is Here", "Sophisticated Lady", and "People" prior to hearing Ray Stevens sing them on this album. I discovered who originally recorded those songs during my research. "People" turns out to be one of Barbra Streisand's greatest hits and a Grammy winner. 

Ray performs these songs incredibly well and his vocals have nuance, as usual, and it enables him to inject as much emotion into the songs as possible. He can be vocally forceful or restrained...he can exaggerate his voice to sound more southern like he does on "Oh, Pretty Woman" or he can croon the lyrics as he does during "Can't Take My Eyes Off You". A day before this album was released Ray issued an audio clip of track 11, "Goin' Out Of My Head". That performance is sensational and so much effort was put into it...the production and the vocal performance itself. Ray closes out the 12 song collection with his take on "MacArthur Park". A sensational, phenomenal, production...it lasts a little over 6 minutes and it's the quintessential song to include in a Ray Stevens bluegrass album of songs you'd not expect to hear in a bluegrass fashion. There's a instrumental solo and various tempo changes and a grandiose big finish to close out the album. I've listened to the album, in it's entirety, twice so far. I'll now start to create my personal online playlist of songs from this album for quick access. I'm quite sure that all of you other Ray Stevens fans are going to love this latest release, too!! You can get your digital copy at Amazon by clicking HERE.

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