Hello all of you fans of Ray Stevens!! Yes, as the headline of this blog entry states, this is my 1,980th entry. Now, of course, tying this into the blog entry you're reading at the moment you probably have already guessed that the year I'm focusing on is 1980. Why not? My 1,980th blog entry should be about the year, 1980, in the career of Ray Stevens. Now, before I get into 1980, some may wonder why I always use Ray's name in the blog entry titles. I do that because his name, along with the specific labels/tags that I use each entry, make it easier for search engines to find the blog.
In the career of Ray Stevens the year, 1980, was another busy, hectic 12 months of concerts, television appearances, recordings, and several accolades. This is the year that Ray Stevens was inducted into the
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Ray was also elected to the
Georgia Music Hall of Fame. These two career awards were in the midst of his debut year with RCA Records. On records Ray returned to comedy with "
Shriner's Convention", a single that shocked most in the country music industry when it reached the Top-10. The album,
Shriner's Convention, also reached the Top-10 on the Country Albums chart. This flurry of activity with the single and album happened within the first quarter of 1980. Ray had signed with RCA Records in the latter half of 1979 and spent the remainder of that year and early 1980 recording the tracks for his
Shriner's Convention album. The southern and southeast television markets were also seeing Ray on a regular basis, as they had since the mid 1970s, promoting products from the Flav-O-Rich dairy company. "
Shriner's Convention" was the only single release pushed by RCA Records in the first half of 1980. The label issued "
Hey There" as a single but it wasn't promoted much, if at all, by RCA or Ray. As far as I know he never performed the song in concert or on any television appearance. The 1980 comedy album contains a song that in the decades since has become just as notable, "
The Dooright Family". That song, a satirical and zany parody of southern gospel family groups, was turned into a music video in 1995 as was "
Shriner's Convention". The two music videos made their debut in a VHS movie that Ray starred in,
Get Serious!. In "
The Dooright Family" we hear the goings-on of Daddy, Mama, Virgil, Therman, Doris, Dewdrop, and Mama Dooright in performance at what we're to imagine is a local county fair somewhere in the South. It's anyone's guess if Ray patterned it after The Happy Goodman Family, The Speer Family, or The Gaither Family...or a combination of all of those southern gospel personalities...however, the Goodman's had much more exposure outside the southern gospel circuit although the Speer's patriarch and matriarch were called 'Dad' and 'Mom'. Some of the other songs on the 1980 comedy album are "
Coin Machine", "
The Last Laugh", "
Put It In Your Ear", and "
You're Never Goin' To Tampa With Me".
Ray closed out 1980 with the bar room ballad, "Night Games". Well, it's not necessarily a ballad...but it's not a comedy/novelty song. The mid-tempo song takes place inside a bar and tells the story of two people who meet and have a one night stand. The atmosphere and imagery of the single conjured up the trend in country music at the time: Urban Cowboy. "Night Games" was a Top-20 country hit by the end of the fall in 1980...from a forthcoming album, One More Last Chance, in 1981, in which Ray is seen decked out in his western/country attire...with an alluring honky-tonk angel in a cowboy hat seated next to him.
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