Hello Ray Stevens fans!! 2022 is the 60th anniversary of the very first studio album from Ray Stevens. I've made mention of that before but I wanted to feature an audio clip from from that 1962 album which Ray posted on his social media pages recently. The album is titled 1,837 Seconds of Humor and was released on the Mercury Records label. Ray wrote all of the songs on the album...it's the album that features "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills", "Scratch My Back", "A Hermit Named Dave", and "Ahab the Arab" among others. Ahab was such a hit that the album's cover focuses on that song and has the song's title in large letters...overshadowing the album's actual title. Elsewhere on the album is the equally funny "Saturday Night at the Movies" and the song I'm featuring, "Popeye and Olive Oyl". Now, unlike 1960's novelty "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon", 1962's "Popeye and Olive Oyl" wasn't met with any type of lawsuit threats from copyright owners. It's my guess that Mercury Records got permission to use the Popeye characters in a song whereas NRC, the label Ray recorded for in 1960, didn't get permission to use Sgt. Preston's name and characters in a recording. Ray's "Popeye and Olive Oyl" novelty, performed mostly as a fast-talking recitation instead of being sung, plays like a typical adventure between Popeye, Olive Oyl, and Bluto...and spinach saves the day. The recognizable Popeye theme and the accompanying Sailor's Hornpipe music is heard in the recording, too. Ray treats us to a falsetto voice with cries of help from Olive...
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