Hello Ray Stevens fans!! If you've taken notice I've been writing blog entries lately that center around the online presence of Ray Stevens. I'm not intentionally going by any kind of pattern...it just seems that way. I hadn't been promoting all of the various online ways you can hear the songs of Ray Stevens during the years that I've been writing fan created blog entries. Why? Well, I've always been a traditional consumer of music. I listen to it on vinyl and CD (my cassette player broke years ago) and since everyone that can see this blog is online, obviously, I didn't find it too appealing to promote readily available methods of music consumption like digital downloading and audio streaming.
I wanted more focus on vinyl and CD back when I created this blog and I'd only mention digital downloads if it was necessary...like if Ray would release a new song through an online digital music platform...and there wouldn't be a physical copy of a CD available. In times like those I'd discuss digital downloads. Lately, though, I've been making up for lost time and relaying the various online sites where you can find Ray's songs. Now, I know you all don't need me to inform you of those music sites, you're all capable of finding Ray's songs on your own, but as a blogger I started to think that I hadn't done much to promote the online presence Ray Stevens has had for about as long as I've been writing this blog.
I title this blog entry with such a unique phrase because songs have hooks, and some songs can bait listeners, and streams are how practically all music consumers hear the music. Streaming is the much preferred method because it doesn't require the downloading of audio files onto your computer. However, record companies prefer people paying a fee of some sort whether the music is being streamed or being downloaded in the traditional sense of the word. If you purchase music on Amazon in their Digital music store they still offer the traditional downloading...the audio files you purchase will be sent as a download attachment to your e-mail address and from there you upload the audio to your listening device. Going back to a previous subject matter in the above paragraph...another reason why I didn't promote the online music presence of Ray Stevens (originally) is because I couldn't show it off in a photo. You can't hold in your hand an audio file for the camera.
Oh, yes, in case you're new to this fan created blog, I post a lot of photos of myself showing off all kinds of Ray Stevens vinyl singles, vinyl albums, cassette tapes, CD's, VHS tapes, and DVDs...so subconsciously I must've avoided promoting online music because I couldn't hold it in front of a camera and click...unlike here, where I'm showing off one of my Ray Stevens items. This is Funniest Characters which was released in 2000. It's a CD featuring the audio tracks from the VHS tape, Funniest Video Characters. The photo is a screen cap from the music video of "The Blue Cyclone".
Usually my blog entries aren't text heavy on top...so this is unique. When writing the blog entries I often lay it out like a newspaper and have a photo posted on either the left or right hand side of the page (the kind you see for newspaper columnists) and then midway or at the end I embed a video if I happen to be writing about a song. Curb Records has been busy the last several months...they've taken over some more previously released Ray Stevens albums. I wrote about 2000's Ear Candy and the 1995 soundtrack of Get Serious! being uploaded onto YouTube by Curb Records. Curb has also uploaded to YouTube Ray's 2009 One for the Road album (July 18th) and the 2011 Spirit of '76 album. The interesting thing about these YouTube audio tracks is if you read the fine print Curb Records used the album's original year of release. So, instead of seeing Spirit of '76 credited as 2011 Clyde Records you're now going to see the credit as 2011 Curb Records. It's like a retroactive credit.
Curb also took over online distribution for Hum It, a comedy album Ray recorded in 1997 for MCA Records, and Curb did the same for several other albums Ray originally released on his own Clyde Records label. I've made mention of that before in a couple of previous blog entries but it often bears repeating. It's a testament to how much Curb Records feels about Ray Stevens...that they've put their name on some of the albums Ray recorded for his own label more than a decade ago.
So far this year Ray hasn't hinted at any upcoming albums. He signed to Curb Records in 2020 following the recording session he had with Jeannie Seely which produced the duet, "Dance Tonight". They promptly issued a newly recorded version of "The Quarantine Song" and then a special 50th anniversary recording of "Everything is Beautiful"...complete with a new music video. Ray also issued a medley, "Everything is Beautiful / United We Stand". Then, in 2021, Curb issued Ray's 4-CD box set, Iconic Songs of the 20th Century. This was followed up with the novelty single, "Gas", in the summer of 2021. Then, in the fall of 2021, Curb Records issued the comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. If you add in all of the previously released albums that Curb Records has re-issued this year and last year it adds up to well over a dozen releases by Curb Records of Ray Stevens audio content. If you're curious you can read my Amazon review of the 4-CD box set by clicking HERE. The review was posted on Amazon almost a year ago...in late July 2021.
One of the CDs in the box set from last year is titled Melancholy Fescue (High Class Bluegrass). Ray had the concept of this album all the way back in 2013...he put out a music video for "Unchained Melody" that year. He sang the song and a Bluegrass rendition of "Oh, Pretty Woman" during a guest appearance at the Grand Ole Opry in 2013...but following this nothing more was said about the potential Bluegrass album. In Ray's 2014 memoir he mentions future album concepts he's working on with titles such as Melancholy Fescue...so the albums in the 2021 box set were nearly a decade in the planning stages. Ray is quoted as having said that he plans on releasing sequels to his 9-CD Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music and his 4-CD Iconic Songs of the 20th Century. I have no doubt that he's racked up a lot of recordings over the last number of years...but figuring out when to release the music, plotting a marketing strategy, etc. is probably the reason why there hasn't been any news release hinting at new music. The "Unchained Melody" music video is inching closer and closer to the plateau of 1,000,000 unique views on YouTube. As of now it's sitting at 998,044...all it needs is 1,956 unique views to reach an even 1,000,000. I'm embedding the music video below...if this is your first time seeing the video, watch it, and share it with your friends...
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