Hello Ray Stevens fans!! We're getting closer to Christmas...we're 6 days and counting until December 25th. In 2016 Ray Stevens released his third Christmas album titled Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me. The title track comes from the pens of Jeff Bates and John Ritter. No, before you get confused, I'm not referring to the late actor with the same name...the John Ritter that co-wrote the song with Jeff Bates happens to be a disc jockey who hosts an inspirational/gospel/country radio show called Rise Up Country. Ray's album was released in November of 2016. A little less than a year later, October 2017, the two writers of the title track of Ray's 2016 Christmas album released a book based on their story. The title track tells the story of Mary and Joseph from the perspective of the donkey. The song features several donkey brays from Ray. If you listen to the song it comes off like a serious Christmas song...but if you watch the music video you'll get a completely different feeling. In the video, as you hear Ray sing, your eyes will naturally focus more attention on the various hand puppets and the bright colors that fill the backgrounds. Ray, in a music video first for him, shares the camera with a hand puppet of a donkey. The whimsical feel of the music video contrasts the serious nature of the lyrics, I think.
As I've written in other blog entries Ray included an array of different types of Christmas songs on this collection. In his first Christmas release in 1997 he filled it with comedy Christmas recordings. In his second Christmas release in 2009 it was mostly Christmas standards but on the third Christmas release in 2016 it was Christmas standards, Christmas comedy, and a couple of original songs. One of the songs Ray included in the 2016 Christmas release was his version of "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer". That song was originally recorded by a man named Elmo Shropshire and his wife, Patsy. Their recording became a monster Christmas novelty...growing in popularity each Christmas season throughout the 1980's. I still like hearing the song. A music video was eventually produced and it aired on The Nashville Network numerous times in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Now, unfortunately, a much younger generation was gaining influence with radio programmers and this forthcoming generation had no sentimentality for this song or any of the classic Christmas novelty songs, in general, and as a result the silly "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer" went from being an annual Christmas standard heard at least a hundred times during the Christmas season all over the country to a song that now gets voted as "one of the worst Christmas song of all-time". My question is: who decided comedy Christmas songs were terrible? In fact, who decided comedy songs, in general, are terrible? If one has that mindset then you apparently take yourselves too seriously. When it comes to "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer", Elmo's original and any re-recording by him feature his distinctive voice. Ray sings the song straight...there isn't any exaggerated vocals or wild sound effects...except near the very end of the song when Ray changes his voice to play the role of Grandpa when the harmony singers holler "sing it, Grandpa!!". Grandpa isn't wearing his teeth...and you'll be able to tell...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...