June 29, 2022

Ray Stevens: "Get Serious! Soundtrack" on YouTube...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! Curb Records quietly uploaded the 1995 soundtrack album of "Get Serious!" onto YouTube a couple of days ago. This CD was originally issued on Ray's own record label, Clyde, as was the direct-to-VHS movie. The soundtrack is notable for the inclusion of the full-length recording of "We Don't Take Nuthin' Off Nobody". In the movie the song was partially performed. In the movie Ray's been thrown into a dungeon by Dudley Dorite. Ray encounters a family of prisoners hanging on a wall in the dungeon...and the father, Luther, is asked how he and the family have kept their positive attitude in light of the dreary dungeon that they've supposedly been locked up in for years. Luther tells Ray that he and his family have perseverance and are filled with family pride. Luther and his wife talk about their pride...sentiments echoed by his parents who are ALSO prisoner in the dungeon. Luther explains it in more detail with the song "We Don't Take Nuthin' Off Nobody". Now, as mentioned, in the VHS movie the song is only partially performed and there's a music video of it on YouTube. However, the full length recording has rarely become available on YouTube...until now. When you listen to the song you'll hear Ray, in character, as Luther...which, in case you've never seen the Get Serious! movie, will explain the reason why Ray is singing the song in the thick southern accent. 

Ray's Get Serious! movie was filmed on location in various areas in Tennessee. Ray, in an interview, made mention that most of the footage was filmed in a town called Burns, Tennessee. The movie, 1 hour and 50 minutes, was called a comedy video movie...it's a movie with 10 music videos interwoven into the story...leading some fans to also consider it a new version of a musical. The official description of the VHS in fan club newsletters of the time, when the VHS was still untitled, was Long-Form Story-Driven Music Comedy Video. The VHS received a lot of publicity on The Nashville Network...commercials for the VHS aired many times in the latter half of 1995 following a national preview of the movie on the Lorianne Crook and Charlie Chase hosted Music City Tonight. The episode was subtitled 'Get Serious Night' and it featured Ray and a list of people who had cameo roles in the movie. Ray sang several songs that appear in the movie...opening the show with a performance of "Gitarzan"...Ray swings in from the side of the stage in his Tarzan outfit. The part of Jane in this television appearance was played by Buddy Kalb...who appeared in the audience singing with a prop bone as if it were a microphone. Some of the songs Ray performed on that Music City Tonight episode were "I Used To Be Crazy" and "Ahab the Arab". Now, off the top of my head, the guests that appeared and participated in discussions about their cameo appearances in the movie were Chet Atkins, Jerry Clower, Johnny Russell, Williams and Ree, George Lindsey, and James Gregory. If you've seen the movie you'll be aware that Jerry Clower had more of a supporting role rather than a brief cameo appearance. A running joke as to why the appearances were so brief is because Johnny Russell's presence demanded more camera and it reduced everyone's camera time. Now, of course, that was a joke...because it was soon revealed that Johnny had less camera time in the movie than anyone. In the first part of the Music City Tonight episode the camera would pan over to Johnny, seated in the audience, and he'd give a peculiar wave to the camera. Little did we viewers know but that wave was the only thing Johnny did in the movie...and he was on camera less than 5 seconds. 


In the 1995 television appearance Ray didn't sing "We Don't Take Nuthin' Off Nobody" nor did he sing the other original song he wrote for the movie... "Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens". Now, for that song, he sang it as a duet with Connie Freeman, his co-star in the movie. Connie played the role of partially deaf Charlene MacKenzie. The music video from the movie was uploaded onto YouTube awhile ago but since half of this blog entry is about the movie's soundtrack I'm going to embed the audio track of Ray and Connie's duet below...

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