Hello all once again!! One of Ray's greatest friends and business associates, the late Chet Atkins, was born on this day in 1924. Chet was one of the people that saw the natural talents of Ray Stevens and the two became nearly inseparable friends. They went into real estate together as well. Chet, as everyone knew, was a master guitarist and he was also the head of RCA Records in Nashville for many, many years...and he was a top record producer for RCA. Ray played on numerous recording sessions for Chet in the early to mid '60s. Ray was also a consistent session musician on a wide range of recordings produced by Shelby Singleton (Mercury Records) and Fred Foster (Monument Records). If all of this wasn't impressive enough both Ray and Chet, when they found the time, were golfing buddies.
In 1976, according to Ray's recollections, Chet asked him if he'd produce a recording on him...singing! Chet Atkins singing was something of a rarity...and therefore it became a novelty item when the Buddy Kalb song, "Frog Kissing", was released on Chet Atkins. Ray produced, arranged, and published the song as well as sang soft harmony vocals...listen carefully and you'll hear the faint harmony vocals on the single release. The novelty became a hit in 1976. Ray and Chet appeared together on the syndicated Marty Robbins television show in 1977 and performed the song. In the television performance Ray is noticeably more present with his harmony vocals. The two performed the song a second time on television in 1980 during a Chet Atkins special. By this time Ray had a beard and was recording for the label, RCA, that Chet was once an executive of.
Chet stepped down from his executive role at RCA by the early 1970s (Jerry Bradley took over most of the country music productions from that point forward) and in 1982 he left the RCA company after a 35 year run (joining the label as a guitarist in 1947) and he signed with Columbia. Chet was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1973. A life-size bronze statue of Chet was unveiled in January 2000. It became a tourist attraction...similar in the way the life-size statue of Chet's contemporary, Owen Bradley, seated at a piano, had become. Owen's statue was unveiled in 1999.
Chet Atkins passed away of cancer on June 30, 2001 at the age of 77...ten days after his birthday.
I'm going to embed the 1976 audio track and the 1977 television performance...you can watch both or pick which performance you'd prefer. The audio recording features more studio production, obviously, than the television performance.
Now then...here's the 1977 television performance...and as far as I know this has to be one of Ray's final television appearances in which he's clean shaven...he'd grow a beard in 1978 and keep it on his face from that point forward...
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