July 5, 2021

Ray Stevens sings some of those soothing, mellow ballads...

Earlier in the year I wrote a blog entry about a 1976 Ray Stevens album reaching 45 this year. That album, Just for the Record, is a wonderful collection of songs and it was the first of several studio albums Ray recorded for Warner Brothers. I periodically return to the Ray Stevens recordings of the late 1970s...I just have this attachment to them...it can't be explained beyond my saying that I love those recordings! Maybe I love them because they're over-looked and under-appreciated? Maybe I love the sound of those recordings and perhaps because those records sound so different than what he was doing at Barnaby Records during the first half of the decade and what he would eventually do at RCA Records at the start of the 1980s...because the Warner Brothers sound is so different from what came before and after his years spent there maybe that's why I have this intense love for those songs. See, I told you it's hard to explain my attachment to those songs!!


"You Are So Beautiful" was Ray's debut single for Warner Brothers in 1976...and as you can see from that 1979 television appearance on Pop! Goes the Country he enjoyed performing it for the fans. Ray followed it up with "Honky Tonk Waltz"...a clever song blending country music within the framework of a waltz. The song takes place inside a bar room. There's a video performance of Ray from 1977 singing the song on an episode of  Pop! Goes the Country...but I'm going to embed the audio track...


A lot of the recordings Ray Stevens did for Warner Brothers were spotlighted in 1995 on a set of three CD's: Cornball, Do You Wanna Dance?, and The Serious Side of Ray Stevens. YouTube has the audio tracks from the second two compilation albums but for whatever reason there weren't any official uploads of the songs featured on the Cornball release. Some wonderful recordings from Ray of "Your Cash Ain't Nothin' but Trash", "One Mint Julep", "Cornball", "Once in Awhile", and "Money Honey" are on that compilation. I came across an audio of "Money Honey" just recently but I've not posted it in any blog entry yet. I've been waiting to see if it'll stay online...and so far it's remained on YouTube. Instead of posting a YouTube embed of the audio track I'll post this "Money Honey" LINK

If anyone comes across this blog entry at some future date and they click the link and it takes you to a blank screen then you'll know why I decided not to embed the YouTube screen.  

I thought the title of this blog entry was to focus on Ray Stevens songs that are mellow, smooth, and calm...the songs I've opened the blog entry with are anything but mellow, soothing, or calm...especially the heavy drum beats and all out showmanship heard on "Money Honey". That recording featured only five musicians...in fact, the entire 1978 There is Something On Your Mind album from which "Money Honey" originates, it only featured five musicians total! The musicians heard on "Money Honey" were Ray Stevens (keyboard, synthesizer, percussion), Mark Casstevens (acoustic guitar), Reggie Young (electric guitar), Jack Williams (bass), and pounding away on the drums on that recording was Jerry Kroon. This line-up of musicians was also heard in the recording of "Old Faithful Trilogy". The 1978 album has 8 songs...on 6 of those recordings Johnny Christopher played acoustic guitar while Jerry Carrigan played drums. I'm sure the two of them were unavailable the day "Money Honey" and "Old Faithful Trilogy" were recorded.  

Yes, after getting things started with some up-tempo songs we're heading into mellow lane now...take a listen to this soothing ballad from Ray Stevens titled "Two Wrongs Don't Make a Right"...you're gonna love the sound and the way in which Ray sings the lyrics...


Staying with that same 1995 compilation album we have the 1976 inspirational ballad, "One and Only You", from the pen of Buddy Kalb. This is significant...it marked the first time Ray recorded a song written by Buddy Kalb...a writer who would go on to dominate a lot of Ray's albums beginning in the mid to late '80s. 


Ray's Warner Brothers era also contains these ballads: "L'amour", "Blues Love Affair", "Road Widow", "You're Magic", "With a Smile", and "Daydream Romance". Here's a bluesy, mid-tempo offering from Ray titled "Blues Love Affair"...from his 1977 Feel the Music album...


Although I love the recordings Ray Stevens did in the late 1970s and I've shared several in this blog entry...historians/critics only focus on novelty songs when it comes to Ray Stevens...and because of that his Warner Brothers time period is often referenced with two novelty recordings: 1976's chicken clucked "In the Mood", released as The Henhouse Five Plus Too, and 1979's "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow"...and all of the serious recordings he did for the company get ignored time and time again...but yet that's one of the reasons why this blog exists...to spotlight what historians and essayists, alike, choose to ignore. "Daydream Romance"...that one is so mellow you'll feel as if you're off in a dream world...take in the relaxed, tranquil music...this is the perfect audio track to conclude this blog entry with!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...