Hello to all of the Ray Stevens fans on this very early Friday morning!! In this blog entry I'm embedding the audio track of "Room Full of Roses" from Great Country Ballads. This will be the 9th audio track from that particular album that I've shared. There are 12 songs on that album...the three that I haven't embedded in any blog entry are "Crazy", "I Can't Help It If I'm Still in Love With You", and "Crying Time". Ray's rendition of "Room Full of Roses" is completely different, both in instrumentation and phrasing, than the one made famous by Mickey Gilley. Ray sings as a country crooner and there's a bluesy background accompanying him. The fascinating thing about this album and the other three that make up the 4-CD box set, Iconic Songs of the 20th Century, is that most of the music heard on the album is from Ray Stevens himself.
He's always played piano/keyboards on his recording sessions...but on these particular albums he played synthesizer-created trombones, harps, drums, and bass guitar. The musician credits for "Room Full of Roses", specifically, are: Ray Stevens (Piano/keyboards; Bass; Drums; Trombones). Jerry Kimbrough is the Acoustic Guitarist while Denis Solee is the one playing Saxophone. Ray is also the background/harmony singers on this track. On some of the other albums in the box set Ray is also credited as playing a Celeste. Now, not possessing the knowledge of a wide variety of musical instruments, I looked up what a Celeste happens to be and if you saw one you'd probably mistake it, as I'm sure I have, for a small upright Piano. I watched a YouTube video of a Celeste demonstration and once I heard it played I immediately thought about a song Ray recorded with a calliope sound effect...and I thought to myself that Ray must have gotten that effect not from a synthesizer but from a Celeste.
Anyway...Ray, as you could tell from my brief paragraph, was heavily involved in the production of Great Country Ballads and he put in a lot of work building the music. Some of his contemporaries and those relatively new to the business probably lay down a rough vocal track for the producers and musicians to go by and then a producer does all of the technical work and then, perhaps, the singer returns for the final master recordings (the ones that'll be on the album)...and then the producers dub in the musicians later...and the singer either goes back out on tour or goes home. You always get the feeling that Ray does things just a little bit differently given his talents in a recording studio. He's involved with a recording from start to finish. On all of his albums he's the record producer, the music arranger, the singer, and he's one of the musicians. Have a listen to Ray Stevens and his rendition of "Room Full of Roses"...
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