Hello Ray Stevens fans!! 2022 marks the Silver Anniversary of a comedy album from Ray Stevens and I'm here to spotlight it. It was 25 years ago, in 1997, that Ray released the Hum It comedy album. If you recall that particular year Ray was in his 40th year as a singer...having released his first singles in 1957...and several publicity pieces and interviewers made note of that fact. The record company, Rhino, issued a CD titled The Best of Ray Stevens. It featured a mini-booklet of liner notes by Dr. Demento and several photo's of Ray through the years. I played the CD so frequently that at one point it started to skip. I still have the CD, though. I'm not one for tossing out music that I've purchased unless I have a replacement standing by to take it's place.
Hum It, the comedy album you see off to the left, got it's name based on a hypothetical joke about the Whistler's Mother painting. In an interview Ray once said that in naming the album they wondered what might've happened if Whistler's mother got tired of hearing the sound of whistling...would she tell her son to simply Hum It, instead? The joke based on the notion that her son went around whistling all the time. Get it? So, that's the story behind the album title. On the cover Ray is dressed as the Whistler's Mother painting and in the picture frame is Ray as a basketball referee, blowing a whistle. The comedy, for the most part, is just as cerebral as the backstory of the album's cover art. The album closer is the satirical "How Much Does It Cost To Fly To Albuquerque?" where we find Ray speaking to a fictional travel agent over the phone discussing ticket rates, frequent flyer rewards, and the overall quality of the airlines. Ray delivers a tale of lament and anguish in the song "My Neighbor" as he tells us what it's like for him and the wife living next door to the obnoxious. "I'll Be In Atlanta" is one of my all-time favorite Ray Stevens songs...an ode to Dixieland, the South, and an homage to the classic film, Gone With the Wind. The album opens up with "R.V.", a comedy song about a retired worker who purchases one but driving it isn't exactly what he'd had in mind. There's plenty of sound effects of crashes and glass shattering as Ray sings about having no room to turn onto different streets and that the height of the "R.V." was incorrectly marked...they crash into a canopy and then they come upon the inevitable overpass.
"Mama Sang Bass", one of the songs that Ray performed on television in the early months of Hum It, features J.D. Sumner as the bass voiced Mama while Ray plays the part of tenor voiced Daddy. The song is about a married couple that work in a pharmaceutical factory. Mama works in the department that makes body building steroids while Daddy works in the department that manufactures birth control pills. As previously mentioned Ray and J.D. performed the song together on television in 1997...on an episode of Prime Time Country. J.D. wore a long, curly blond wig. The parody song was never released as an official single nor did it become a music video but it got a lot of notice back then given it's use of J.D. Sumner as 'Mama' and the fact it was a re-interpretation and parody of the Johnny Cash single, "Daddy Sang Bass".
The two songs from the album that became music videos were "Virgil and the Moonshot", a novelty about a southern simpleton who works at NASA as a janitor who breaks company rules and enters the space capsule to play the role of an astronaut...unaware that it's an un-manned test capsule and it'll soon be launched into orbit. The song was written as a response to the 1995 blockbuster movie, Apollo 13. NASA and their Space Program saw a resurgence thanks in part to that movie. Virgil, at various moments in the song, utters the catchphrase from the movie in which over the radio we hear Houston being called and the astronaut says "we got a problem". Buddy Kalb appears in the video as the head of Mission Control.
The second song that became a music video from Hum It happens to be "Too Drunk To Fish". In this song Ray sings about a fishing trip...with Harold bringing along enough beer to open up a small store. In the music video Ray plays himself and Harold. Ray's frequent songwriting partner, Buddy Kalb, appears in the video sitting in a boat at the beginning and end...in addition to appearing at various moments during the group scenes. The official music video hasn't been uploaded onto Ray's YouTube channel but he did upload his performance of the song, which features snippets from the music video, from his guest appearance on The George Jones Show in 1997. You can listen to the audio tracks from Hum It on YouTube. Simply search for Ray Stevens and the album title and you'll be able to listen to the entire comedy album.
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