July 14, 2022

Ray Stevens: The Online Presence...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! Awhile ago I wrote a blog entry about the availability of Ray Stevens songs on various online sites. Ray himself has promoted his presence in digital download, streaming media. In earlier blog entries I mentioned that I prefer to listen to audio tracks by Ray Stevens on YouTube but as most of you are well aware there are numerous online music sites to listen to Ray. A few days ago Ray uploaded a Spotify playlist titled The Complete Ray Stevens. It's a playlist of more than 100 Ray Stevens recordings (specifically 115) from all time periods. Ray's Spotify account gets nearly 200,000 monthly listeners. Four of his recordings have racked up more than 2,000,000 plays. As of July 14, 2022 the Top-6 most played Ray Stevens songs on Spotify are:

1. The Mississippi Squirrel Revival (1984 recording)  5,585,530
2. The Streak (1974 recording)  4,784,167
3. Misty (1975 recording)  4,555,687
4. Everything Is Beautiful (1970 recording)  2,308,552
5. It's Me Again, Margaret  (1992 recording)**  1,124,357
6. Ahab the Arab  (1995 recording)**  1,046,005

Some explanation is in order, not necessarily about the photo of Ray Stevens that I decided to use, but about audio tracks 5 and 6. Although Spotify features the original 1984 recording of "It's Me Again, Margaret" by Ray Stevens, very interestingly, his 1992 re-recording for the music video is the one that's gotten more than 1,000,000 plays. This 1992 re-recording later surfaced on Ray's Curb Records Box Set release in 2005. The 1962 original of "Ahab the Arab" is also on Spotify but yet it's the re-recording for his 1995 music video, found on the VHS Get Serious!, which has gotten more than 1,000,000 plays. I don't know if those audio tracks at 5 and 6 are the ones that listeners find first in Spotify search results but it's unique for re-recordings to out-perform original recordings. I'm a Ray Stevens nut/fanatic and I like each rendition of "Ahab the Arab" that I've heard Ray perform: there's the 1962 recording, a 1965 recording featuring an introduction from Ralph Emery, the 1969 recording which has gotten a lot of exposure on various compilation albums, and the 1995 recording for the music video. If you're not on Spotify and want to be you can create a free account. If you're already on Spotify but have never thought to look to see if Ray Stevens is there do a search for him and then start listening. I say that because I believe there are some people out there who automatically think that because Ray is of the well-established age group that he doesn't have his music available on contemporary online music sites but he actually does. Whenever you visit Spotify, since that's the site I'm spotlighting in this blog entry, do a search for Ray Stevens if you've never thought to do one before...you'll be amazed at just how many recordings of his that you'll have at your fingertips.   

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