The subject of cover songs has become something synonymous this year for Ray Stevens. The release of four digital albums this year showcases Ray Stevens doing his renditions of a wide variety of songs from the pop and country formats. Great Country Ballads (released in February), Melancholy Fescue (released in March), Slow Dance (released in April), and Nouveau Retro (released in May) showcase some of the most iconic songs of the 20th century. In fact, there will be a forthcoming box set called Iconic Songs of the 20th Century...it will feature CD copies of the four digital albums. That box set is suppose to be released, as far as I know, on July 23rd...so we're a little less than 2 weeks away from it's release. On the Nouveau Retro digital album there's an updated rendition of "Young Love" which Ray previously recorded in 1975 on his Misty album. When the song was released as a single late in 1975 the B-side happened to be "Deep Purple".
The "Young Love" single was a slightly bigger chart hit than historians would have you believe. Almost all historians cite the Billboard Hot 100 (pop chart) performance. They ignore it's appearance on country music-oriented singles charts. It charted pop and country for Ray Stevens beginning in January 1976. It made the Top-50 on Billboard's country single chart early in 1976 in both America and Canada and it reached the Top-40 on Cashbox's Top-100 country single chart in late February 1976. It was charted in Cashbox for 8 weeks.
I've always loved Ray's take on "Deep Purple". The song originated in the Tin Pan Alley years...the music was written by Peter DeRose in 1933. Lyrics for the song came along from Mitchell Parish in 1938. The song is traditionally performed in a big-band style with a crooning vocalist. Ray transformed the song into a rollicking sing-a-long with a bluegrass flavor...as a tie in to the title track of his 1975 Misty album. Two songs from that album, "Young Love" and "Indian Love Call", were updated by Ray and placed on the Nouveau Retro digital album this year. I would've loved to have heard an updated rendition of "Deep Purple" as well...but here's the 1975 recording of the song...a fabulous performance. I personally love hearing the booming, upfront music...those steel guitar and fiddle solos...the entire production is fabulous.
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