September 3, 2022

Ray Stevens: The CMHOF Page

Well, hello to all the fans of Ray Stevens!! This is a rare blog entry in the middle of the day. It's not one of my days off work, though...but I decided to write a blog entry a few hours before I leave for the evening. Has anyone recently visited the Ray Stevens profile page at the Country Music Hall of Fame website? I've visited the page several times over the last couple of years...Ray was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2019...and he has his medallion on display at his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville. The medallion, in case you're wondering, is something that the organization began to award inductees into the Country Music Hall of Fame. In addition to the iconic plaque, which you see off to the left, members are also given a medallion. They wear these medallions around their neck at each subsequent induction ceremony. It is something that emulates the National Baseball Hall of Fame ceremonies...where current members of the Hall of Fame are present to welcome the new induction class...and it's been part of the official Country Music Hall of Fame induction process for at least a decade. I know it's been around awhile but I also remember when there wasn't such a thing as the Golden Medallion ceremony but I can't find an exact date and year for the first medallion ceremony. I'm more than likely not looking in the proper places...but yet the official hall of fame website doesn't give a history time line on the ceremony, neither. Well, anyway, Ray Stevens has a bio page over there. It's been edited by the people who run the site and it looks much more appealing the way it is now. They've also added several photos of Ray from different time periods. 

They skip around a lot...focusing, obviously, on the country music side of his recordings...but when they reach the section where they discuss Branson, Missouri there's a typo error. The site has Ray having performed at his Branson theater from 1981 until 1993...now, of course, it's an obvious typo to all fans of Ray Stevens. Ray had the theater built from the latter half of 1990 and it had it's grand opening in 1991. He performed at the theater for three seasons (1991, 1992, and 1993) and then he returned for another run of concerts in the in 2005 and 2006. In between 1993 and 2003 an organization/country music show called Country Tonite utilized the theater for concerts. Ray, during that 10 year period, was the landlord...so he was still having success with his theater even though he, himself, wasn't performing there. The final section of the bio titled 'From Branson to CabaRay' comes off rushed and far less detailed. In that final section they more or less cram 25+ years (1991-2019) into one paragraph...but then end the bio referencing career awards (his 1980's inductions into both the Georgia Music Hall of Fame and the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame). 

There's also mention of his Music City News Comedian of the Year awards...he won these for 9 consecutive years. Those particular awards were fan based and he won in the years 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1994. The fans could either vote using a telephone number advertised on The Nashville Network (beginning in 1989) or they could vote using a ballot found inside an issue of Music City News magazine. The Nashville Network had a Viewer's Choice award beginning in 1983...and in 1989 it was merged with the Music City News awards. Prior to 1989, subscribers of Music City News magazine were the only people eligible to vote in the awards. I realize a lot of what I just written is wordy and probably too gaudy for an overview bio at the Country Music Hall of Fame webpage...but that's the kind of detailed information I find fascinating and noteworthy. 

The CabaRay showroom opened in 2018...his syndicated television series, Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville, began as Ray Stevens' Nashville in November 2015. The show's title change occurred in 2017 when original plans were to have the show start taping at the CabaRay...but the grand opening was pushed back a full year while the property was held up in court awaiting a building permit. As a result of the delay only a handful of episodes were taped at the CabaRay showroom. The bulk of the episodes were taped inside one of Ray's studios in downtown Nashville. The episodes taped at the CabaRay are easy to distinguish from the television studio episodes. The episodes taped at the CabaRay will show a red curtain in the background, Ray on a stage, with the band behind him...while the TV studio episodes show the band off to Ray's left...they're off to his right in the eyes of the TV viewer. This is the bio page at the Country Music Hall of Fame...click HERE

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