November 24, 2021

Ray Stevens: Thanksgiving and More...

Here we are...the day before Thanksgiving. Have you noticed that there hasn't been any sort of heavy publicity for Thanksgiving Day events? In times past, during the week of and leading up to Thanksgiving Day we'd usually see commercials for the football games, the parades, movies of the week centered around the family, and just an overall feelgood atmosphere. The holidays, particularly Thanksgiving and Christmas, were always a time when differences were set aside and the spirit of goodwill and friendship filled the air. 

A few weeks ago I noticed after Halloween came and went the local stores began putting up their Christmas items. The various cable TV movie channels began airing their Christmas movies. We've seen television commercials with Christmas overtones already featuring Santa Claus and in some commercials Ebenezer Scrooge. Thanksgiving, by comparison, hasn't gotten much attention and I find that strange. I guess I took notice because it's so blatantly obvious now. Thanksgiving is a day that the politically correct has long since wanted to abolish...and given who's running the country now the advocates are getting their wish, somewhat, considering the lack of media coverage of various Thanksgiving Day events. Tomorrow may be different. When I click on the television around noon to start my day of football watching there might be a lot of Thanksgiving tradition and atmosphere on the actual day...but leading up to Thanksgiving you wouldn't know it's tomorrow without having to look on a calendar since the media has all but ignored it.  

Here's a LINK to my previous Thanksgiving post...written a couple of days ago. In that blog entry I made mention of some of the things to be thankful for as a fan of Ray Stevens. When I looked into my blogger stats I seen that an older blog entry I'd written about Thanksgiving had gotten a slight resurgence in discovery. The name of that blog entry is 'Thanksgiving Feast'. The name of the blog entry I wrote a few days ago is 'Thanksgiving 2021'. I'm running out of titles. I thought about naming this blog entry 'Turkey Drumsticks and Stones' but I couldn't think of any Thanksgiving food that ties in with stone unless an eccentric Aunt brings over fruitcake or undercooked dumplings. I love chicken and dumplings but I don't like fruitcake...which is mainly associated with a Christmas dinner. I love mashed potatoes and noodles and turkey and practically everything else. I don't like sweet potatoes...some people like them. I'm not a fan of cranberry sauce, either. We never have alcohol at any dinner. I drink pop and my parent's drink coffee. We have leftover food at Thanksgiving! I usually heat up food fixed on Thanksgiving for several days. The thing that gives the most leftovers is the turkey, obviously, and second are the chicken and noodles. The noodles fixed resemble thick homemade noodles. Do you re-heat the turkey leftovers or eat it cold?

I usually re-heat the slices/pieces of the leftover turkey. My parent's aren't as picky...they'll eat it re-heated or cold. When I mentioned alcohol and leftover turkey I thought of the phrase, cold turkey. I then began to think of the few alcohol related songs that Ray Stevens has recorded over the years. Ray hasn't recorded many of them...but those that he's recorded are entertaining. The first one that leaps to mind is "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down". Ray recorded the song in 1969 and it was fabulous. It's historically documented as being a non-hit for Ray but he charted with the single here in America and overseas. I don't have the stats in front of me at the moment but in some locations overseas, I'm thinking Australia and perhaps New Zealand, or perhaps up in Canada, his rendition of "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" appeared on the weekly sales charts in those countries in 1969. The song, from the pen of Kris Kristofferson, is about a guy with a hangover on a Sunday morning. Johnny Cash, in 1970, recorded the song and it became a number one country hit and a pop hit. Ray was the first recording artist to put the song out. The B-side of this particular pressing of the song is "The Minority", a marvelous social commentary song Ray recorded in 1968. Off the top of my head I don't think Ray recorded another song dealing with alcohol until the comical "Happy Hour is the Saddest Time of the Day" in 1984. That song deals with a couple that's since split-up, we assume over excessive drinking, with the woman deciding to leave and seek sobriety while the guy mourns over her leaving him. Throughout the song the man pouts when thinking back on all of their good times, how many drinks they took in while a couple, etc. Listen for the references to drunk behavior, name-dropping of alcohol brands, and the music accompaniment. It'll sound crazy my saying this but the music itself sounds tipsy, woozy, drunk. 

In 1987 Ray recorded the comedy song "The Day That Clancy Drowned". In this humorous tale we're told of a man named Clancy who worked at a brewery in Milwaukee. One day while examining a 60,000 gallon vat of beer he slipped and fell. Ray tells of how Clancy, for a few minutes, actually fought being rescued from the vat...almost happy to be swimming in and eventually drowning in a vat of beer. A few years later, in 1990, Ray recorded the bouncy "Jack Daniels, You Lied To Me Again". That song is a conventional bar room love song where a guy blames his choice of alcohol on the frequent mistakes he's made with his relationships. In 1997 Ray recorded "Too Drunk To Fish" and he turned it into a hit music video. 

In 2008 Ray recorded "Bubba, The Wine Connoisseur". In that song Ray tells us about a southern guy with a unique way of wine tasting. He becomes so famous that he eventually changes his name, slightly, when he begins tasting French wine. He informs us he wants to be called Boo-Bah instead of Bubba since he feels French wine has made him way more cultured. 

A year later Ray recorded "Cooter Brown", a funky up-tempo comedy song about a wild man born on New Year's Eve who spends his time making all of the beer joints, night clubs, and water holes in town. We're told he's a flashy dresser with lots of gold rings and jewelry. The guy loves to drink so much he had a tattoo on his arm that stated "don't let me drive". 

There are several songs that Ray recorded which take place inside a bar and there are some songs that feature a bar room setting at some point. "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone", from 1985, takes place mostly inside a wrestling arena and later, a bar room. Ray's captivating 1988 recording, "Blood and Suede", recounts a fictional car wreck of a Porsche and a Mercedes-Benz in an affluent area of Los Angeles. In the song Ray mentions Mullholland Drive and the crash involved a rock and roll singer in his Porsche listening to his own greatest hits album too loud while a drunk driver in a Mercedes speeding away from Gucci's slammed into the Porsche. The subject matter of the song is dark, as you can tell, but I found the song incredible. It features a whistle similar to The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly. A 1980 love ballad, "Night Games", is about singles bars.  

Earlier in 1980, "The Watch Song" tells of a guy who's sitting inside a bar room minding his own business when in walks another guy. The guy minding his own business is accused of seeing another man's wife. The husband challenges the guy to step outside the bar and fight. The accused obliges and is beaten up by the jealous husband. The enraged husband not only beats the guy up but he stomps on the guy's watch. Ray plays the role of the unlucky guy beaten up...and throughout the song continually asks help and advice from John Cameron Swayze. When Ray recorded the song in 1980 the television commercials for Timex were everywhere and their spokesman was newsman John Cameron Swayze. On Ray's current comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore, a comedy song titled "The Gambler and the Octopus" takes place inside a bar. 

When you visit the CabaRay showroom for upcoming Ray Stevens concerts you're going to notice the Piano Bar. It's the place most people are at prior to and after a concert. 

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