Once again I bring you an overview of the most recent YouTube upload of the Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville show. This time around it's Episode 12, Season 2 guest starring Jimmy Wayne. Ray opens the show with a rousing rendition of "Smoky Mountain Rattlesnake Retreat", a comedy song that originated in 1986 on Ray's Surely You Joust comedy album. When I saw Ray in concert the 1986 song was in his set list but I don't know if it's still a part of his set list as of 2022. I saw him in concert a few times...twice in Renfro Valley, Kentucky; once in Nashville, Indiana; and a couple of years ago at the CabaRay showroom in Nashville, Tennessee.
Overall this particular episode is a somber one. Jimmy Wayne discusses his turbulent upbringing, coming from a broken home, and his eventual success in country music. It's part of a book that the two discuss at the start of the interview segment. In the years leading up to his appearance on Ray's CabaRay Nashville show Jimmy had authored/co-authored several books with a foster home/homeless theme. The names of his books are Paper Angels (2012), Walk to Beautiful: The Power of Love and a Homeless Kid who Found the Way (2014), and the children's book Ruby the Foster Dog (2017). Jimmy speaks of the homeless and the need for an abundance of foster homes. In this episode Jimmy spotlights the 2014 book. He speaks of his being raised in a foster home. He sings "Sara Smile", a single from 2009 and one of his first releases, "I Love You This Much", from 2003. This doesn't have anything to do with the show but I thought it interesting to share that a nearby neighbor of mine looks a lot like Jimmy Wayne from a distance. When I seen this episode the first time around I couldn't help not to notice the similarities.
Ray's second song of the episode is "Safe at Home" and I think it's the first song that Ray recorded from the pen of Nick Sibley who would go on to pen a couple of other songs Ray recorded. It first shown up in 2000 on an album Ray put out called Ear Candy. The songs from that album, well, most of them, would resurface in 2002 when Curb Records issued Ray's Osama Yo' Mama comedy album. Almost a decade later, in 2010, "Safe at Home" found itself on the track list of Ray's album that year, We The People. It's safe to assume that the song means a lot to Ray given the fact that he's kept it part of his shows for more than 20 years. When I saw Ray in concert, yes, he sang "Safe at Home". Now, for those keeping track, this is the next to last episode of Season Two. The seasons of the series consist of 13 episodes each.
If this series is something brand new to you then I thought it appropriate to explain that CabaRay Nashville is a music/talk show...but there isn't a desk and a long couch. Ray uses his red piano as his 'desk' and whoever the special guest happens to be sits next to the piano during the interview segment. Sometimes, if the guest sings an informal duet with Ray, the guest remains seated next to the piano. The main song from a guest takes place out front of the piano with the show's band seated off to the side. Ray sings the opening and closing songs of the show singing from that area, too...unless he's playing the piano during the performance. In that case he sings from where you see him in the photo above.
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