December 24, 2021

Ray Stevens: Well, it's Christmas Eve...

Yes, it's just after Midnight so it feels a bit bizarre to say it's Christmas Eve. I usually wait until it gets past 6pm before I consider it Christmas Eve. The evening before Christmas Day. Regardless of this it's still the day before Christmas and I'm embedding Ray Stevens Christmas songs...something of an annual tradition on this fan created blog page.


"Winter Wonderland" is a Christmas classic that Ray recorded for his 2009 album, Ray Stevens Christmas. As you can see the album's cover photo appears on the YouTube video screen as the audio plays. When you Google search the song, for whatever reason, a YouTube audio clip of another recording artist shows up first in the search results. I'm assuming the artist or his management is paying for the immediate search result considering the song goes back decades but yet a YouTube audio of his recording shows up first. The song goes back to 1934 and was written by Felix Bernard and Richard Bernhard Smith. Originally written as a romantic love song...a couple walking along in the winter landscape. They decide to build a snowman and call it Parson Brown. In research several years ago I found out that more than a decade after the song was written additional lyrics were added to align the song with Christmas and children. So, when you hear the song, you'll hear it go from a romantic date between a couple in the winter landscape to a childlike frolic with the mentioning of building a snowman and pretending it's a circus clown. 

Building upon the Christmas mood we have a song Ray wrote titled "Deck the Halls With Teardrops". It uses a familiar riff to tell a lonesome story and it's one of my favorite songs on the Ray Stevens Christmas album.


The song "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" is another Christmas standard that Ray Stevens recorded. The song, written in 1945 by Sammy Cahn and Jule Styn, was reportedly written during a heatwave in California as the writers were thinking of colder weather...and I imagine one of the writers exclaiming in frustration "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" when thinking of the heatwave. It's probably why the song is titled the way it is. Even if it turned out at some point that the story behind the song's creation isn't true it's nevertheless still a good story. This song nor "Winter Wonderland" ever explicitly state that it's Christmas nor is there any mention of Santa Claus, sleighs, bells, or any other Christmas description. 

There are a lot of songs that weren't originally intended to be Christmas songs but because they fit the wintertime mood and explicitly describe snow and cold temperatures in the lyrics they've become synonymous with Christmas and they're played every season. In this area we're not going to have cold weather or snow on Christmas...one of the very few times Christmas Day will be in the low 60's. Due to the warmer weather our part of the United States, this year, is more in line with Bing Crosby's 1950 recording about Hawaiian Christmas, "Mele Kalikimaka". But I'd rather have the warmer weather than icy, snowy roads and freezing temperatures...even though, deep down, everyone wants snow on Christmas...so "Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!"...

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