August 6, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-11, S-1

Here it is August 6th and this is my first blog entry of the month!! As I mentioned in a previous blog entry my work hours have changed which doesn't leave me a lot of extra time but I'll squeeze in a blog entry when I get the time. Today we're going to be looking at Episode 11, Season 1 of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. The special guest this time around happens to be classic country music icon Gene Watson. Ray opens the show singing "Power Tools" to a rousing audience. Snippets of the limited animation music video plays along side Ray's performance. The song originated in 1991 and can be found on the album #1 With a Bullet.

Ray brings out Gene Watson and they discuss music; Gene talks about his start in the music industry and how one of Ray's harmony singers once worked for George Jones (Sherri Smith). Gene speaks of touring with George all over the U.S. and Canada. One of the stops Gene made during one of his tours in the 1980's was at Jones Country, the music park George Jones owned for a little more than 6 years in Colmesneil, Texas (1983-1989). 

Gene tells a brief history of "Farewell Party" and how he first heard the song on a Waylon Jennings album. He says that Waylon's recording is way different than his own. The song had also been recorded by Little Jimmy Dickens as an up-tempo sing-a-long. Gene remarked that they recorded "Farewell Party" in one take and within half an hour. Gene's second song is "Fourteen Karat Mind". That particular 1981 single was Gene's only #1 country hit in the United States. He had hit #1 on the country chart in Canada several years earlier with "Paper Rosie", which peaked within the Top-5 in the United States in 1977 but fell short of #1. Gene's breakthrough single arrived in 1975, "Love in the Hot Afternoon". 

Inserted a couple of times throughout the episode is a sketch from Ray's 1991 Amazing Rolling Revue television pilot. It's the sketch of Ray as a captured man insisting that he's oblivious to pain and nothing hurts him...but all it takes is a gentle tap on the face from an empty glove to start Ray divulging plans and revealing the hiding places of the enemy. 


Ray closes the show singing "Mr. Businessman". That song goes back to 1968 and was originally found on the album, Even Stevens. When I saw him in concert he performed this song in all of the concerts I've been to, so far. I've seen him a couple of times in Renfro Valley, Kentucky; once in Nashville, Indiana; and once at the CabaRay in Nashville, Tennessee. Since he doesn't tour anymore I'd have to make a return trip to Nashville, Tennessee in order to see him in concert once again. 

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