Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! This particular blog entry focuses on a novelty song from back in 1963...from the second studio album in the career of Ray Stevens. This is Ray Stevens was released in 1963 on Mercury Records. I have the vinyl album and I have a copy of it on CD. The compact disc copy is the second half of a 2-album-on-1-CD...it's paired with Ray's first studio album titled 1,837 Seconds of Humor. I first heard most of Ray's early 1960's recordings on a compilation that Mercury Records released in 1970 titled The Best of Ray Stevens. The copy I had happened to be a re-issue, in cassette tape format, from the mid 1980s. As a single it reached the Hot 100 of the pop chart and the Top-40 of the Rhythm and Blues chart. The single's B-side, "It's Party Time", didn't appear on Ray's 1962 or 1963 albums...to this day it remains a B-side exclusive. Ray's early '60s albums and songs were all produced by Shelby Singleton. Ray, on records, didn't start to become credited as a producer until his move to Monument Records in the latter half of 1963. He joined that record company, headed up by Fred Foster, as a session musician/record producer/music arranger but he remained a recording artist for Mercury Records for a few more years. Ray's first recording for Monument Records arrived in the final quarter of 1965. But let's got jump ahead...we're discussing the novelty song, "Speed Ball", from 1963.
"Speed Ball" is a novelty song about a very fast motorcyclist and his girlfriend, Sugar Beet. Some hear the name as Sugar Bee, perhaps, but I've always heard it as Sugar Beet. The girlfriend has a very memorable experience on the motorcycle as she and Speed Ball pass a car on a hill and get a major surprise as they top the hill in the passing lane. I think the song would make a good limited animation music video...I'm sure many of you would especially be interested in how the scene involving Speed Ball and Sugar Beet topping the hill would be visually depicted on screen. Speed Ball, we're told, wears leather jackets and loves to peel out and throw debris all over the place as he takes off on the motorcycle. Ray includes some verbal effects of screeching tires and the genteel engine rev which, in contrast to the wild motorcycling, makes the revving hilarious.
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