October 8, 2021

Ray Stevens: My Review of "Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore"

Hello all of you fans of Ray Stevens!! It's officially release day of Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore!! Later this morning Ray will be interviewed on the Bill Cody morning radio show on WSM. The series is called Coffee, Country, and Cody. Bill and his on-air partner, Charlie Mattos, are on the air real early and they sign off at 10am Central time. A portion of their radio program airs on Circle TV. Ray posted on his social media that he'd be on at some point during the final hour of the show...which kicks off at 9am Central time, 10am Eastern time. Ray is also taping an episode of the Huckabee television series later today. He'll be guest announcing...and I inquired if Ray is only going to announce or will he do any singing...a reply I got stated that Ray will only be on the show as the guest announcer. I'm going to watch the show Saturday night and see what's in store. In the meantime...it's October 8th and the new comedy album from Ray Stevens is available!! I Pre-ordered my copy of the album and so I've listened to it several times and I finished listening to it again prior to my starting this review. The album contains 14 fabulous recordings...all aspects of comedy are on display in this album. I say that because some people out there probably find yourselves thinking that Ray Stevens specializes in a certain style of humor and doesn't venture outside of it. I'd argue that he's all the time singing a wide variety of songs and has touched on all forms of clean comedy. He won't do explicit or warning label humor. On Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore we find Ray singing about a wide range of topics and subject matter...which includes some very pointed commentary on current events.

I'd had the image of the back of the CD in my photo collection for a couple of weeks and have been waiting for the proper time to post it. The album opens up with "Hoochie Coochie Dancer". Now, this comical song features a story of a man who meets up with a woman at a carnival...not knowing her true motives...and one thing leads to another and he finds himself presenting her with a wedding ring. Then he tells us that he was struck in the back of the head and the next thing he knew was waking up with a headache but no sign of the ring or the dancer. Ray continues the up-tempo feel on track two, "Coco Cabana Band". This song was premiered on country music website, The Boot, on October 7th. The song is a fabulous performance from Ray as he delivers vocal impressions of monkeys and a wild scat singing solo. The band is made up of 5 primates: A gorilla, baboon, chimpanzee, monkey, and orangutan. They migrated from the Congo and made stops in several U.S. cities before settling in Gulf Shores, Alabama. Ray describes the band as the top bananas in all of Alabama. "Gas", track three, is a song that should be very familiar to Ray Stevens fans in that the audio track's been available on YouTube since the month of June. It was promoted in June as the first single from the forthcoming comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. The song is about a U.S. President who has a problem with "Gas"...and lyrically the song uses puns and double-entendre conflating the real-world issue of fuel with flatulence. 


After opening the album with three up-tempo songs Ray slows down the tempo dramatically with "My Better Half". Now, this is a song that I find hilarious but it's performed with an incredibly serious, bluesy delivery. From the pen of Bobby Braddock the song tells of a man describing a typical night by himself...since the man is alone and doesn't feel whole he uses a lot of singular rather than plural language and it's this subtle touch that causes the song to be hilarious...at least it is to me. We're back with up-tempo on "Moonshine"...a song that includes just about every slang reference to homemade alcohol. Track six is the comical ballad "The Gambler and The Octopus"...this wild story is about a gambler at a bar who makes numerous bets with a bartender. The gambler claims the octopus can play a flugelhorn...followed by several other instruments...and each claim is proven true which causes the bartender to have to pay up with free drinks. The gambler then has the tables turned when the bartender claims that he has an instrument in the back which he doesn't believe the octopus can play. The bartender brings in the bagpipes...and the octopus, well, if I reveal what happens next it'll give away the payoff/punchline.

Now, "The Gambler and The Octopus" is quite a story but the following track, "Soap Sally", in a lot of ways tops it. In that song Ray sets the mood...there's some spooky, funky, swampy undertones accompany the story of a woman who wears no clothes...behaves like something close to a witch...with a reputation for dastardly evil doing. In the song we're told the woman is definitely an outcast...and yet playing into the old saying that there's someone for everyone a man decides that Sally may not be an actual outcast or a witch but confesses that he himself is half crazy, too, and by song's end he hooks up with her. The CD has 14 songs and if it were a vinyl album "Soap Sally" would be the last song on Side One. Track eight is "Down in Mexico"...a previously recorded song by The Coasters. Ray sings the song fabulously as only he can do, and given his love for their music and the passage of time, he updated the song musically. He closes the song with one of the lengthiest, funniest, and dare I say sexually comical series of yelps, moans, and grunts. 

"Dis-Connected" is a bouncy sing-a-long that I hope becomes a single release. It's one of the shortest songs on the album and the subject matter is potentially relatable in that it depicts a relationship that's crumbling due to the internet and social media enabling people to talk with texts and through other online capabilities rather than speaking to, or having a relationship with, someone in person. In the song Ray sings that the guy's got over 1,500 friends but regardless of that he feels "Dis-Connected". Next up is "The Quarantine Song"...and you should all be familiar with the song if you follow Ray's career. It debuted as a music video in 2020 about COVID-19...and by year's end an audio recording of the song was issued by Curb Records. The video's gotten more than 3,000,000 unique views. "Old Dog" is a cute sing-a-long about a guy who declares love for his wife and no matter how old they get she still excites him. 

"Red Hot Chili Cook Off" is a song that had previously been released as a music video and has finally found an album to call home. The comical song tells the story of a chili fan who tastes all kinds of chili and he lets us know how much he loved or hated it. The chili gives him all kinds of internal fits and discomfort...pleading with us to by-pass it altogether. It takes place at a chili cook off in Jalapeno, Texas. The album's title track, "Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore", is a social commentary about the mixed up, backward absurd country we find ourselves living in. Ray sings about the over-reaction from some people when it comes to several animated cartoon characters (he name drops Elmer Fudd, the Coyote, and Pepe Le Pew). Ray also points out a lot of the recent controversies and laments that when some people get happy it makes other people mad so there "Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore". Ray closes the album with "Disorder Down at the Border"...a song about, well, the title tells you what it's all about. I don't apologize for my enthusiasm and fandom of Ray Stevens and so it should come as no surprise that this album is absolutely fantastic in my opinion. 

If you look at the musician credits in the fold out cover you'll see Ray credited with several synthesizer originated instruments on most of the songs (bass, baritone saxophone, clarinets, marimba, trombones, drums) in addition to his piano and keyboard contributions. There is also inclusion of funny musician credits. In the credits for "Moonshine" Ray is credited with doing the 'glug-glug' sound effect, for example. In "The Gambler and The Octopus" he's credited with several instruments but is also credited for 'burps' and 'gulps'. This kind of thing can be found on most of the songs with vocal sound effects. Usually the credits don't get so specific but it's comical that they listed Ray's vocal effects within the musician credits. It's a great comedy album from Ray Stevens!

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