Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! As I type this I've just come off of watching this week's episode of CabaRay Nashville on YouTube. This episode guest stars songwriter Don Schlitz. The songwriter's been in the country music industry for more than 40 years...and he's recently been in the news as one of the upcoming new members of the Grand Ole Opry. Don Schlitz and another legendary music figure, Charlie McCoy, were both invited to be the newest members of the Grand Ole Opry last week. I do not know when their formal induction will be. Don has written or co-written many, many songs and several of them won high profile music industry awards: "Forever and Ever, Amen" was a blockbuster for Randy Travis. Don's songs, at one point in time, seemed to be exclusively recorded by Randy Travis but that's just my way of saying that Randy loved recording songs from the pen of Don Schlitz.
In this episode (Episode 4, Season 1) Don speaks of his decision to move to Nashville and to become a songwriter. He's self-effacing which you will notice right away. The majority of the conversation centered around the songs that Don had written or co-written...and Don sang a medley of songs that become hits for Randy Travis (such as "On the Other Hand", "Deeper Than the Holler", and "Forever and Ever, Amen"). He spoke about Bobby Bare being the first artist to record "The Gambler" before Kenny Rogers. A good portion of Don's mid '80s to early '90s songs were usually written with Paul Overstreet.
Don made an observation in the episode that the business end of country music tends to frown on multiple singers recording the same song. He mentioned this when he brought up Bobby Bare having recorded "The Gambler" before Kenny Rogers did. Once upon a time a song could be recorded by a singer and it remain an album song...not released as a single...but then another singer would hear the song and decide to record the same song and put their spin on it and release it as a single. Also, other recording artists would take notice of a hit song and would decide that they, too, wanted to record the song for themselves and maybe have a hit with it. This is why, in country music's past, you'd have 3 or 4 versions of the same song by different artists out at the same time...and you'd have other versions of the same song as album cuts, too. Today, the record labels have the attitude of "no...so and so just had a hit with that song...you can't record it...not even as an album track.".
Ray Stevens opens the show with "The Streak" and closes with "Everything is Beautiful"...
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