March 3, 2021

Ray Stevens sings "Hang Up and Drive"...

Hello all...if you're a fan of Ray Stevens then I'm sure most of you by now have heard the song "Hang Up and Drive". The song originated awhile ago in Ray's career and every so often he brings it back into the spotlight. The recording was originally released in the early 2000s. It first appears on a comedy album Ray released in 2000 to fan club members on his own record label, a collection called Ear Candy. It also appears on the 2002 album, Osama Yo' Mama. After the release of the 2002 album on Curb Records his Ear Candy release from 2000 was quietly pulled from online stores. The reason, I'm assuming, is due to most of the songs on Ear Candy showing up on the 2002 Osama Yo' Mama album. In those formative years of online sales the small, independent labels like Ray's Clyde Records didn't have a competitive hope against the major record labels. Also, record companies were still pressing CD's on a fairly routine basis so there wasn't any kind of urgency to get something available to online music sites....especially when there weren't many in existence at the time. 

"Hang Up and Drive" would also become a music video...it features live-action Ray Stevens interacting with a limited animation backdrop...achieved through the use of green screen/blue screen technology. 

The earlier performance of the song (it's official music video) is on YouTube and now there's this performance he gave on his syndicated PBS series, CabaRay Nashville. The song, through a light-hearted approach, warns people to avoid being on their phone while driving. The song came out several years before text messaging became so commonplace...but given how timely the song's message is you can play it for any successive generation who texts while driving or talks while driving. I don't know if the song's creation was explicitly a reaction to the 1999 high-profile car wreck of George Jones...he'd been attempting to text somebody when he took his eyes off the road and seconds later crashed into a concrete structure...but the song could've been in response to the overall trend of texting and driving. It's a very funny song on a not so funny subject matter.

   

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