A couple days ago Ray Stevens shared a caricature illustration that was drawn by one of his friends, Randy Cullers. The illustration shows Ray seated in front of many suitcases and behind him are people who look similar to Ray and then, off to the right, is a caricature of Ray's dummy, Julio. There's an airplane off to the left and I see windsocks and so the scene takes place just outside the airplane at an airport...coming home from a lengthy tour. The caption of the illustration reads Ray Stevens' Never Ending Purgatory Tour '89. I take that to be an exaggeration. I've never seen Ray's tour itinerary for 1989 to know if it was jam-packed with concert dates but it was probably incredibly lengthy. Are you familiar with Ray's dummy named Julio? Ray, in 1987, recorded a novelty song titled "Sex Symbols". The song was a spoof of the unlikely duo of Willie Nelson and Julio Iglesias several years prior. Ray, throughout "Sex Symbols", mispronounces Julio by calling him Julie-o and Ray refers to Don Juan as Don Joo-Ahn. When Ray performed the song in concert and on TV he'd have a dummy of Julio sitting beside him. Ray was still performing this song in his concerts when he was in Branson, Missouri headlining his own theater. A performance of the song is on his 1993 VHS tape, Ray Stevens Live!. I wrote a blog entry awhile back with the video of Ray and the Julio dummy embedded and I've decided to share it again in this blog entry. The song made it's debut on Ray's 1987 comedy album, Crackin' Up. He performed it on Hee Haw and it was released as a single. The B-side of "Sex Symbols" happened to be "The Ballad of Cactus Pete and Lefty". A limited animation music video was produced for the B-side of the single nearly 20 years later. Ray and Buddy Kalb wrote the B-side whereas Buddy himself wrote "Sex Symbols". Ray doesn't perform the song in his concerts anymore. I think the last time he performed the song in concert happened to be while he was in Branson, Missouri. The times I'd seen him in concert it wasn't performed.
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