August 21, 2022

Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville on YouTube: E-13, S-1

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! I just finished watching the Friday evening YouTube upload of Episode 13, Season 1 of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. In this episode the special guest happens to be Billy Dean. Ray opened the show singing the comical "Little By Little" from his 2015 comedy album, Here We Go Again!. If you're familiar with Ray's intro by Bill Cody in each episode you're probably familiar with that phrase. Bill usually says "and now...don't look, Ethel...but here we go again...". The song is comical but it also could be categorized as an inspirational song. 

Up next is a clip from Ray's Branson, Missouri years where he does a parody of "Secret Agent Man" in which he sings "Information Man" and incorporates an enlarged cordless phone to speak into. An operator gives Ray a lot of verbal grief and without warning Ray pulls out a gun and shoots the phone's receiver. After this clip ends Ray introduces Billy Dean. 

I first heard of Billy Dean in the early 1990s. His breakthrough song, "Only Here For a Little While", provided a little insight into the style of songs he would largely become known for...positive, uplifting story songs. Billy talks about his professional relationship with The Gatlin Brothers and how he and Larry Gatlin teamed up and wrote a song together called "An American with a Remington". Billy tells the story behind the song and how important gun ownership happens to be. Billy remarks that the song's video received more than 16 million views on Facebook within a week's time and the video upload on Larry Gatlin's social media pages as well as his own social media added to that total.  

Billy's follow-up performance is "Billy the Kid". Prior to the performance he explains the history behind the real Old West outlaw, Billy the Kid, and makes mention of the outlaw's rabid admirers and how his headstone had been vandalized so much in New Mexico that the cemetery has since placed prison bars over top of the headstone. Billy then remarks that the song's lyrics are actually about his own childhood and how, at that point in time, parents encouraged their kids to 'run out and play' rather than stay in their front or back yards. Billy says that, as a kid, he liked playing Cops and Robbers as well as Cowboys and Indians. "Billy the Kid", the song, details Billy Dean's nostalgic look back on his childhood and in adulthood he wonders whatever happened to his innocence and that he misses his childhood. In the screen cap below it captures Billy in a laughing mood as he and Ray discuss The Gatlin Brothers. 

As a trivial note, Ray once recorded a song which featured a Billy Dean co-writer credit called "Meanwhile". The song appears on Ray's 1993 Curb Records studio album, Classic Ray Stevens, but there's no discussion of that recording. Billy co-wrote it with radio personalities/songwriters Gerry House and Devon O'Day.

Ray closed the show singing the rousing iconic novelty song, "The Preacher and the Bear". Don Cusic gave a brief history of the song and mentioned Phil Harris popularizing it...and then Ray started into the song and given the religious overtone he was in character and even intentionally dropped a lot of letters off his words to give them a more southern twang...emulating the Phil Harris style. 


This happens to be the final episode of Season One of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville. Ray produced 13 episodes of his TV series per season. It's my guess that Episode One, Season Two will air this coming Friday on YouTube.  

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