Hello Ray Stevens fans!! It was during this time of the year in 1971 that Ray was nearing the release of his rendition of "Turn Your Radio On". The single was released late in October and it hit early the following month. The single was Ray's third consecutive gospel recording following "All My Trials" and "A Mama and a Papa". Those two single releases hit the Easy-Listening audiences...resulting in two back to back Top-20 hits. On the left side of the page is one of the many picture sleeves that accompanied the vinyl single, "Turn Your Radio On", backed with "Loving You On Paper". I typically don't pick favorites when it comes to picture sleeves on singles but of all the picture sleeves to accompany the single I like that light blue picture sleeve the best. Some may prefer other ones but that's my favorite one...of the ones I've seen. The first three singles from the then upcoming Turn Your Radio On album (released early in 1972) all featured B-sides of non-gospel recordings. The reason for this is because the single releases came months before the recordings for the full length album and as a result the B-side recordings weren't gospel/religious in tone and two of the B-side recordings never appeared on the 1972 Turn Your Radio On album. The B-side of "A Mama and a Papa" was a sultry love ballad called "Melt" that has never appeared on any Ray Stevens album. The B-side of "All My Trials" was "Have a Little Talk With Myself" (a previously released A-side single from 1969). The four single releases from the 1972 album were: "A Mama and a Papa", "All My Trials", "Turn Your Radio On", and the gospel/rock hybrid rendition of "Love Lifted Me". That fourth and final single release was a hit record in the country of Bangkok. When that bit of trivia is mentioned it brings a lot of disbelief but I seen the international music chart in Billboard, called 'Hits of the World', in a 1972 issue and it shown Ray's recording of "Love Lifted Me" among that country's hit songs for several weeks. That single's B-side in general release was one of his recordings from 1970, "Monkey See, Monkey Do", but on promotional copies of the vinyl single the B-side was "Glory Special", which is one of the songs on Ray's 1972 gospel album. It's baffling why the promo single had a recording from the album as a B-side but the commercially released single of "Love Lifted Me" featured a previously released song from 1970...anyway...
"Turn Your Radio On" became a pop, Easy-Listening, and country music hit in the final months of 1971 and into early 1972. The initial release of the single late in 1971 means that it's just about to reach it's golden anniversary...50 years!!
Ray's rendition of "Turn Your Radio On" is what I grew up hearing on several compilation albums that were released on Ray...most notably 1987's Greatest Hits on MCA Records. The song comes from the pen of Albert E. Brumley...a writer of several gospel standards. There have been several modifications to the song over the decades with lyric additions and lyric deletions but the lyrics heard in the Ray Stevens 1971 rendition are what I'm familiar with the most. Decades later (in 2014) Ray updated the song and included alternate lyrics for each verse but kept the familiar chorus of the song intact. Since I'm spotlighting the 1971 rendition, which turns 50 in the not too distant future, here's the audio recording of the 1971 rendition...
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