Hello all you Ray Stevens fans!! This blog entry is part of my recurring series promoting the re-opening of the CabaRay showroom. Technically the facility is re-opened...a couple of weeks ago on July 9th the Piano Bar re-opened and I wrote a blog entry about this at the time. Each Friday and Saturday the Piano Bar inside the CabaRay will be open for several hours...a pianist will be there...the one who's headlined the Piano Bar since the CabaRay opened in January 2018, John Jonethis.
Ray Stevens returns to the CabaRay on September 4th and you can read about it and purchase concert tickets when you click HERE. The CabaRay is the culmination of a decades-long dream of Ray's. He famously headlined his own theater in Branson, Missouri for five seasons (1991, 1992, 1993, 2005, and 2006) and when you read his 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville, you'll discover the reason why he decided to have a theater built in Branson rather than in Nashville. Ray never let go of the dream of having a music venue in or around the city of Nashville and ultimately construction on the CabaRay began in the fall of 2016 after a lengthy wait for a building permit approval. Once the permit was granted construction began but naturally, due to the on-coming winter weather, there was a lot of downtime. The showroom had an original grand opening scheduled for the mid-summer of 2017 but because of the waiting period for the building permit combined with the downtime associated with the weather a grand opening was pushed to a later date...finally opening to the public in the latter half of January 2018. In his memoir, which I made reference to earlier, Ray remarked that people within the music industry would look at him as if he'd lost his mind whenever he'd bring up the possibility of building a concert venue in Nashville. The lack of interest from Nashville's business community is what caused him to go to Branson and have a theater built down there in 1991...construction of that theater began at some point in 1990. If you don't have Ray's memoir you can order it on Ray's website store.
The Branson theater is no longer in operation. Some people on social media continually ask if Ray's performing in Branson still or you'll get comments asking if he'll ever return to Branson...when questions like that are asked it shows they're completely unaware that Ray's had a concert showroom on the outskirts of Nashville since 2018 and so that's where he performs his concerts. Anyway, after Ray sold the Branson theater to the RFD-TV network in 2006 or 2007 they utilized the theater for nearly 10 years, I think, but ultimately it closed down. The CabaRay is one of those places you'll need to put on your itinerary when you visit Nashville. Tourists for many decades have always visited the Opry, the Country Music Hall of Fame, the Ryman Auditorium, and the other sights associated with country music...and the CabaRay should also be on that list of places to visit when you're in the Nashville area.
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