June 25, 2022

Ray Stevens: Don't I Have that Album?

One of the things that comes up from time to time among fans of Ray Stevens is his extensive album discography. I've written blog entries in the past where I've included lists of his studio albums and lists of some notable compilation albums. However, if you gaze at a Ray Stevens album discography and you're a brand new fan or a long time fan that's decided to look at the amount of albums available...well, it can be a daunting task. There's official studio release albums, there's official compilation albums, there's a wide variety of compilation albums on Ray Stevens featuring songs licensed from multiple record companies, and then there are albums that are re-releases but have different cover art and often times a different album title. Those kinds of re-releases aren't proper re-releases or proper re-issues (a subject of a previous, recent blog entry) because they contain new cover art and almost always different sequential order of the track list. If you're curious there happened to have been less than a dozen of these album re-releases with different title and cover art. The most earliest is a vinyl album originally called Ray 'Ahab the Arab' Stevens and Hal Winters. The original release featured an image of Ray from one of his early photo sessions at Mercury Records. The album itself is a compilation released on Crown Records and it contains songs from Ray Stevens and instrumentals by an act named Hal Winters. It's a 10-track album...and the recordings featured on Ray are from the late '50s.


Those are the same albums but have slightly different titles. As you can tell from the second image the re-issue originated in the mid 1970s because that's, to the best of my knowledge, an artist rendering of Ray with longer hair and modeled after the photo that appears on the back of his 1975 album, Misty. That's just my own assumption. What are the songs by Ray which appear on both albums? Well, there's 5 songs: "Truly Truly", "Nothing But Gold", "Who Do You Love?", "Always On My Mind", and "Cholly Wolly Chang". If you're familiar with the first title then you'll know that Ray doesn't actually say the phrase, 'Truly Truly'. He actually sings the phrase "Truly True". These recordings come from Ray's years at NRC Records. This company was owned and operated by Bill Lowery and Ray was on this label for nearly 2 years give or take a few months short of being a full 2 years (1959-1961). On the single release NRC used the title "Truly True"...so that's why I consider the NRC title official. You can look up the songs from this collection on YouTube. "Nothin' But Gold" never appeared on an NRC vinyl single. 

Some other albums that have been re-issued but with different cover photos are 1972's Turn Your Radio On. It was re-issued in 1982. On the re-issue, on CBS Records, they used a current photo of Ray...a reverse image if you can believe it. Since they used a reverse image I'm not posting it in this blog. Barnaby Records originally released the album in 1972. CBS Records handled distribution at the time...so when it came time for a re-issue, 10 years later, CBS Records handled it. In 1992 Arrival Records, an affiliate of K-Tel Records, re-issued the 1972 gospel album. The re-issue featured new cover art and a new title, The Gospel Side of Ray Stevens. In 1996 Curb Records re-issued Turn Your Radio On as Great Gospel Songs...and in this re-issue, as had happened in 1992, they included a couple of additional songs in addition to different cover art. The songs added were "Everything is Beautiful" and "A Brighter Day". The 1996 re-issue also featured the full length recording of "All My Trials". Great Gospel Songs had the same 12 songs as The Gospel Side of Ray Stevens

Ray's 1984 album, He Thinks He's Ray Stevens, was re-issued in 1992 under the new title, Mississippi Squirrel Revival. I have no idea for the different title and cover art. MCA released both the 1984 album and the 1992 re-issue...so it's a bit odd that the record company chose to issue it with a different title and cover art. Some have suggested MCA re-titled the re-issue because of that song's familiarity...that might be true...but, still, it should've been re-issued with original cover art and original title. 


A few years later Ray Stevens issued the album, Beside Myself, in 1989. That particular album would see a re-issue twice. The first re-issue contained 8 songs and titled At His Best. Then, for the CD copy, all 10 songs from Beside Myself were included but it still retained it's At His Best title and different cover art. It makes no sense as to why the album was re-issued with a different title and cover art...but whenever you see Beside Myself or At His Best keep in mind they're the same album. On the cover of the re-issue they promote three of the songs: "Marion Michael Morrison", "I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O.", and "Your Bozo's Back Again". 

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