Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Yesterday being Friday that meant that another complete episode of CabaRay Nashville was uploaded onto YouTube. If this is your first time coming across this fan created blog I am a long-time fan of Ray Stevens. I chronicle just about everything that goes on in his career or has gone on in his career. I keep three blog entries available on the main page and all of my other blog entries are over in the archives. If you read the introduction underneath my profile picture over on the right hand side of the screen you'll find out why I created this blog back in 2008. Every Friday at 6pm Central, 7pm Eastern CabaRay Nashville premiers on YouTube. This week it's Episode 5, Season 1 and the special guest is Charlie McCoy with an appearance by Lori Stegner.
Ray opens the show singing "I'm My Own Grandpaw", a classic novelty originally popularized by Lonzo and Oscar. Grandpa Jones even recorded a version of the song. Ray remarks that the genesis of the song may have been inspired from Mark Twain. The song's writers are Dwight Latham and Moe Jaffe. I was watching the show as it played and was posting on the chat screen. I also posted a comment in the comments section. Whenever the video performance of his TV show is airing live on YouTube each Friday evening there's an option to post messages in the chat area on the right hand side of the screen. Once the live time frame expires, roughly after 22 or 23 minutes, the chat session is unable to be accessed.
Charlie performs the "Orange Blossom Special" on the harmonica and afterward talks with Ray about their years playing on recording sessions. Charlie speaks of the time he and Ray played twin trumpets on several Elvis Presley recordings in the mid 1960s. I'm so glad this particular episode become available in it's entirety on YouTube because it verifies a lot of my commentary in the past. Whenever I'd make posts on social media sites that Ray played trumpet on several Elvis recording sessions I'd get the 'yeah, right' reply from people who had no idea how extensive the career of Ray Stevens happens to be. So it was fun to see Charlie McCoy validate my prior comments from years ago.
After a lengthy interview segment with Charlie, Ray had his band perform the classic instrumental, "Sugarfoot Rag". Lori Stegner, the comic/impressionist who appeared in Ray's 2010 music video, "Caribou Barbie", appears on this episode as the character, Cinderella G. Stump. Ray and Lori/Cinderella sing their version of a novelty song from the 1950s called "Tim-Tay-Shun". The novelty was originally recorded by Red Ingle and Jo Stafford...however, on the recording, Jo used the obviously phony name, Cinderella G. Stump. She did this because, at the time, she was known as a very fashionable, sophisticated pop singer. She perhaps felt that her peers would tease her for performing 'a novelty song' and so she used the alias. Ray and Lori recorded their duet for Ray's 9-CD box set, The Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. Don Cusic appears as the music professor. Don, in reality, is a real music professor currently at Belmont College in Nashville...but of course, he doesn't dress in a graduate's uniform when he's teaching his classes. He's also a music historian and has written dozens upon dozens of liner notes. He helped with the research and text that appears in the Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. He was the editor of Ray's 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville. Don wrote a couple of songs that Ray recorded for a couple of gospel albums. Don's song, "If Jesus Is a Stranger", become one of Ray's most-performed songs for several years from 2014's Gospel Collection, Volume One. Don and Buddy Kalb co-wrote "Just a Touch of Jesus" which is found on Ray's 2016 release, Just a Closer Walk With Thee.
In the meantime enjoy Episode 5, Season 1 of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville...
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