Hello once again!! Ten days until Christmas and earlier today Ray Stevens uploaded a performance he gave of "Santa Claus is Watching You" on an episode of Nashville Now. There wasn't a specific year given as to when this was recorded. In the beginning of the video, briefly, you'll see the Nashville Now desk and Ralph Emery and what appears to be his frequent puppet sidekick, Shotgun Red. The set is decorated for Christmas and Ralph's desk is from the late 1980's time period. I've seen this performance before...and it was described as a late 1980's performance at that time as well...but it could also come from Christmas time 1990. I wish I knew specific years of what the set looked like on Nashville Now. I only have vague time frames. The desk is gray as are the couches...and so I'd pinpoint this appearance as being December 1989 or December 1990. I know that it's not from the mid 1980s because Ralph's desk and the chairs during that time period were brown. Here's the performance uploaded today from Nashville Now in the late 1980s.
Ray has several video performances on his YouTube channel of "Santa Claus is Watching You" and he also has an audio track of the song. The song has an interesting history. It was written and recorded by Ray in 1962. Mercury Records released it as a single and it became one of the Christmas hits of 1962. That recording was largely aimed at children...and a lot of the lyrics catered to a younger audience. I'm sure parents of children in 1962 got a kick out of the novelty song and would play it so their kids could hear Ray's warning about Santa's watching so be nice to your parents and classmates. In 1985 Ray re-recorded the song. He kept the basic hook lines and imagery of the original (the list of reindeer expanded greatly in the 1985 recording) but he changed nearly all of the lyrics. The song went from being a cute warning for kids to be on their best behavior because Santa's watching to a hilarious song about a wife who better remain faithful and true to her husband because Santa's watching.
Ray turned the song into his first ever music video in 1985. It became a Christmas music video standard on The Nashville Network...often making their Top-10 most played Christmas music video lists in the late 1980s and into the early 1990s.
Another performance by Ray of "Santa Claus is Watching You" on YouTube is from 1989...on a Christmas special hosted by Ralph Emery. In the performance he's joined by hand puppet, JoJo. You may remember JoJo from Ray's television commercial for Get The Best of Ray Stevens. JoJo appears during the snippet of "Gitarzan". JoJo also appears on Ray's 1995 movie, Get Serious!, as a speed zone informant. Whenever in the movie Ray appeared in his yellow car JoJo often popped out from underneath the dashboard to tell him the speed zone. You'll notice when watching that Ray's performance includes the use of a click track...meaning that someone off stage in the sound department dubbed in Ray's falsetto phrase "He's everywhere! He's everywhere!!" during the live performance to make it look as if JoJo is 'speaking' but there are several camera angles that show Ray's mouth closed when JoJo 'speaks'.
Ray has, for decades, put lots and lots of sound effects and unusual sounds on the many novelty songs he's recorded...and in order to come as close to possible of matching a studio recording in a live setting is to have some of the sound effects and other voices dubbed into the live performance. Ray uses multi-tracking whenever he makes records...the vocal and every instrument is recorded on separate tracks...and during production everything is mixed. He'd use a click track during live performances of "Sex Symbols", for example. His lines for Julio, which were recorded on a separate track, would be played back in concert as Ray sang his lines live while operating the mouth movements of Julio. Some people, because Ray sang the song in concerts and on television with a dummy at his side, have mistakenly thought Ray to be a legitimate ventriloquist. Here's Ray and JoJo from 1989...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...