August 21, 2021

Ray Stevens: "Gas" at 10.7K

Earlier this morning I took a look at the unique views/YouTube plays for the current novelty song from Ray Stevens, "Gas". When I checked the totals earlier today it had 10,695 plays. That was a 30 play increase from the day before. Now, just a few minutes ago, I decided to check the totals and it's sitting with exactly 10,700 plays.


As far as I know, given that there's been no news releases to the contrary, everything that's scheduled to take place in Ray's calendar of events will continue to proceed. His comedy album is still expected to be released in October, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore, and in less than 2 weeks from now (September 4th) he's expected to re-open his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville. I came across a blurb while searching the internet for Ray Stevens stories and I hesitate to make mention of it because it's well in advance and things are always subject to change...but on October 6th, according to the Opry website, Ray Stevens is scheduled to make a guest appearance on the Wednesday Night Opry

Guest appearance you ask? Yes, as hard as it may be for some to believe, Ray isn't a member of the Grand Ole Opry. He has made guest appearances on the Opry many, many times over the decades but he isn't a member of the Opry. A basic explanation as to why some country recording artists aren't Opry members goes back to a decades long rule that had to do with the number of appearances a member had to make per year. A long held rule stipulated that members had to play at least 25 to 30 Saturday nights per year at the Opry; and with 52 weeks in a year, that meant that a recording artist who happened to be an Opry member, well, that recording artist would only get the chance to play a venue that paid more for a Saturday night appearance 22 to 27 times a year because the rest of their Saturday nights would be spent taking in a basic union scale performance fee at the Opry. That appearance requirement no longer is enforced...it hadn't been enforced for more than 30 years, I guess, but that's a big reason why a lot of recording artists that had legendary careers in country music weren't members of the Grand Ole Opry. Also, the Grand Ole Opry isn't limited to just Saturday night anymore. The Friday Night Opry came along in 1979...and this was followed in the next couple of decades by the Tuesday Night Opry and the Wednesday Night Opry. The Saturday night broadcast is the only one referred to as The Grand Ole Opry but all of the Opry broadcasts take place on the same stage...either at the Opry House or downtown at The Ryman Auditorium.  

When Ray appears at the Opry I'm going to go ahead and speculate that he'll be promoting the comedy album during this October appearance...since that album is scheduled to be released in October...but it's hard to tell what he'll perform. There's the 4-CD box set, Iconic Songs of the 20th Century, that could also receive publicity with this October performance. Will Ray sing "Gas" at the Opry or will he sing some new comedy song that none of us have heard? Will he sing any of the songs from the 4-CD box set, too? Will he decide not to sing anything new and instead unleash a classic like "It's Me Again, Margaret" or "Everything is Beautiful" on the Opry audience? The closer we get to that October 6th date I'll blog about it more.  

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