July 4, 2021

Ray Stevens: Independence Day 2021...

From this Ray Stevens fan to all of you other fans of Ray Stevens...Happy July 4th...Happy Independence Day 2021...as I touched on in a previous blog entry the Fourth of July usually brings to mind cook-outs, fireworks, and baseball. That is why I chose to use that particular album photo...1987's Greatest Hits, Volume Two. This compilation album, released on MCA, features 10 songs. The record company decided to make Side One (the first five songs if you have the CD copy) heavy on contemporary recordings from Ray. The songs on Side One in order of appearance are from the years 1987, 1986, 1985, 1979, and 1987: "Would Jesus Wear a Rolex?" (1987); "Can He Love You Half as Much as I?" (1986); "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone" (1985); "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow" (1979); and a brand new song, "Mama's In the Sky With Elvis" (1987). The songs on Side Two (songs six through ten if you have the CD copy) are heavy on vintage recordings from Ray: 1968, 1985, 1961, 1969, and 1976. "Mr. Businessman" (1968); "The Haircut Song" (1985); "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills" (1961); "Freddie Feelgood" (1969); and "In the Mood" (1976). Greatest Hits, Volume Two and Greatest Hits were both combined to form Get The Best of Ray Stevens...and that 2-LP collection was sold over television and became a very popular item through mail order. All three of those collections were Gold and Platinum sellers. Some trivia: the umpire on the album cover is one of Ray's friends, the late Norro Wilson. In country music Norro Wilson was a legendary songwriter and record producer and he had a comical side which shown itself in several projects Ray released over the years. Norro appeared in some of Ray's music videos and was a cast-member of an online sitcom Ray starred in, We Ain't Dead Yet

Ray wrote a song called "Come on Home to Baseball" and it first appeared on his Thank You album in 2004. The song later appeared on the Box Set from Curb Records in 2006 and Ray performed it on an episode of his CabaRay Nashville television show. I've embedded the audio track from the Box Set below...


Ray recorded another sentimental song centered around baseball, family, and nostalgia called "Safe at Home" from the pen of Nick Sibley. Ray recorded it in 2000 and it appeared on his album that year, Ear Candy. The song was then placed on the 2002 album, Osama Yo' Mama. Later that decade, in 2010, "Safe at Home" was placed on the We The People album...from there it became a very popular song in Ray's concerts for the next 3 to 4 years. You can watch Ray sing that song in the embed below...it's from an appearance on Larry's Country Diner. The people at Country Road TV uploaded the performance onto their YouTube channel last year. I'm thinking this performance originated in 2010 or 2011...right around the time Ray was promoting his We The People album. I'm pretty sure this performance is prior to 2014. 

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