Hello Ray Stevens fans!! We're approaching seven months since the release of Ray's comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. The album was released on October 8, 2021. I'm sure many of you have become familiar with the comedy songs from that album by now, but, I'm surprised that there hadn't been any follow-up music videos to "Hoochie Coochie Dancer". Ray guest starred on an episode of Huckabee a couple of months ago and his performances and interview from that episode are on YouTube. Ray sang "Disorder Down on the Border", from Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore, and he also sang a never before released song called "Where Are All The Twelve Year Olds?". The general public that seen that episode probably thought that the song was on the latest comedy album but it isn't. To date there hasn't been any information released as to whether the song will be on an upcoming album or if it's a song that Ray chose to sing but hasn't officially recorded.
There are 14 comedy songs on this album...and once the fans saw the album cover we all immediately thought how similar it looked to his 1989 album, Beside Myself. The main difference between that 1989 album and the one released in October 2021 is the 1989 album featured 10 evenly split songs. There were 5 ballads and 5 comedy songs. On the 2021 release there are 14 comedy songs ranging from silly and absurd to pointed and topical. A couple of the songs are definitely in the category of social-commentary. Those songs are "Dis-Connected", "Gas", "Disorder Down on the Border", "The Quarantine Song", and the title track, "Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore". When you listen to "Gas", a song Ray recorded in 2021, you're going to come away with a sense that the writer was prophetic...there's a line in there that mirrors the current talking points/excuses coming out of Washington, D.C. as to why there's high fuel costs...this "Gas" song is yet more proof that fuel costs were on the rise throughout 2021...long before Ukraine came under military attack. Aside from those topical, social-comment recordings there are other styles of comedy that Ray brings to the album. "Soap Sally" continues to be a favorite as does "The Gambler and the Octopus", a type of comedy song that builds and builds until an eventual punchline. "My Better Half" is quietly funny...since Ray is singing about a man dealing with a broken relationship the lyrics reflect it.
I may have mentioned this in a previous blog entry but there's a customer review out there, which was written on April 19th (last month), claiming that there's off-color material on this comedy album and in my opinion that simply isn't true.
The customer, prior to leveling such a claim, said they were longtime fans of Ray and have purchased a lot of his albums but the reviewer didn't offer any examples, such as citing any lyrics, that are "off-color" on the 2021 album. There are no comment options over there and so you're left without having the chance to question the reviewer's claims or ask the reviewer to explain how they come to their opinion. The labeling of something as off-color is highly subjective. If listening to a comedy song about a "Hoochie Coochie Dancer" or the hilarious scam Ray sings about in "The Gambler and the Octopus", or hearing a version of an urban legend, "Soap Sally", rates as off-color then, as a reviewer, specifically point that out in the customer review rather than smear the entire album under a cloak of vagueness. To counter that reviewer's comments I'll say that if you're a Ray Stevens fan you're going to love this Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore album and you'll be entertained by the various styles of comedy represented. That customer review reminds of a blurb I seen about Ray's 1987 comedy album. The brief review written in 1987 criticized Ray's decision to incorporate what the reviewer more or less called 'mature comedy' onto the album. By 'mature comedy' we're left to assume the reviewer had problems with songs such as "Sex Symbols", "Three Legged Man", "The Day That Clancy Drowned", and "Doctor, Doctor Have Mercy On Me"...but we'll never know since the reviewer/commentator never got specific.
When you listen to "Soap Sally" you're not going to hear anything explicit or "off-color"...what you're going to hear is a very funny re-telling of the urban legend...and this is just one of the fourteen comedy songs found on the album...
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