June 24, 2022

Ray Stevens: There Needs to be Re-Issues...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! As Ray continues to take a hiatus from performances due to vocal issues I wanted to take a minute or two to point out something that continues to remain a pet peeve of mine. What is it? It's the lack of proper re-issues of many Ray Stevens vinyl albums over the decades. If you search various online music sites and specifically search CD or Digital Downloads, and look in the traditional country or classic country format, you're going to come across re-issues of albums that were originally recorded 40 to 50 years ago and were only available on vinyl, 8-track, or cassette tape but have been re-issued on CD or Digital Download. There still remains a market for CD just as there remains a market for vinyl...but my point is a lot of recording artists have had their catalog of music brought into the digital age with proper re-issues of albums. Now, I'm not saying that audio tracks from older albums aren't available online...they certainly are...if you search YouTube for anything specific you're going to find audio recordings from the 1930s or earlier if you do to search for them. The thing that baffles me, though, is the lack of Ray Stevens albums that have been properly re-issued. Just in case anyone's confused by my choice of words, 'properly re-issued' means an album is re-issued on CD or as a Digital download intact and with the exact same information, front cover art and if applicable back cover art, and the songs are presented in their original chronological order. Also, as a plus, if we're talking about CD's, I like to read liner notes and musician credits. There are all kinds of album re-issues on all kinds of recording artists...but there's never been a focused effort to properly re-issue any of Ray's long out of print vinyl albums. 

In 2005 there was a series of re-issues in CD format of several Ray Stevens albums from the early to mid 1970s. A company called Collectible's Records issued 3 CD's on Ray in 2005...each compact disc contained 2 complete albums. I appreciate the fact that six of Ray's studio albums for Barnaby Records saw the light of day in CD re-issue back in 2005...but the track lists of each re-issue was largely out of order from how they appeared on the original vinyl and there were no liner notes promoting the songs or documenting the career of Ray Stevens to date. In other words, the 2005 releases wouldn't be considered proper re-issues even though I appreciated their availability. I had not yet completed my vinyl collection of Ray Stevens albums and so any CD on Ray that shown up with vinyl-only recordings I didn't hesitate to purchase it. 10 years earlier, in 1995, Warner Brothers went through their archives and released 3 cassette and CD compilation albums on Ray Stevens. These were like a random selection of songs Ray recorded for Warner Brothers in the late 1970s and placed on three compilation albums. Now, to their credit, the songs followed a particular overall theme in line with each album's title...but by no means were those compilation releases a proper re-issue of Ray's studio albums for the label. The same story holds true for the vinyl albums Ray recorded for RCA in the early 1980s and the album he recorded in 1983 for Mercury Records. 

At the beginning of this blog entry I included a photo of Ray's 1969 album, Have a Little Talk With Myself. This album, comprised mostly of Ray's versions of contemporary songs, features liner notes written on the back of the album. It also features an in-depth musician list. This may be the only album in Ray's career to feature so many musicians. This 1969 album has never been re-issued. You can find the audio tracks on YouTube...uploaded by a fellow fan of Ray Stevens...but it's never been properly re-issued. I wrote a blog entry about Ray's 1973 Losin' Streak album a few blog entries ago...it's an album Collectible's Records skipped over in 2005 when they were re-releasing Ray's studio albums for Barnaby Records. To this day it's not been properly re-issued. Audio tracks from the album are on YouTube, again, thanks to a fellow Ray Stevens fan. I feel that there needs to be proper re-issues of Ray's vinyl albums for two obvious reasons...it introduces the music to newer fans, first of all, and it enables his catalog of recordings to be easily accessible online. If you visit his Spotify channel or look up his recordings on any streaming service or digital music platform you're not going to find songs like "Oh, Leo Lady", "Junkie For You", "Road Widow", "Such a Night", "Melissa", "I Believe You Love Me", "You're Magic", "Take That Girl Away", "Banned in Boston Trilogy", "OM", or "Take Your Love". Those are just some of the songs that come from his late 1970s/early 1980s albums. There needs to be proper re-issues of Ray Stevens albums!!  

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