Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Season Three of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville got underway on YouTube this past Friday. This episode marked the beginning of the program's syndication run with local PBS stations. The program had aired for two seasons (26 episodes) on RFD-TV beginning in November 2015 and running through December 2016. The program then moved to local PBS syndication starting in January 2017. A total of 52 episodes were produced for the PBS run. There are two ways of looking at the seasons. There is the cable TV, niche TV, and online streaming definition of a season (13 first run episodes) and there is the network TV definition of a season (26 first run episodes). So, depending on how you market it, the show is described as having 4 seasons of 13 first run episodes each or 2 seasons of 52 first run episodes in it's initial syndicated run on local PBS stations. Regardless of how you market/promote the number of seasons the fact is, in total, there were 78 episodes produced of Ray's television program. Since I'm following the 13 episode per season definition this is Episode 1 of Season 3.
Ray opens the show singing "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon". He tells the history of the song once he concludes the performance. Although not mentioned on the YouTube program description he performs a second song, 1961's "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills", as a tie-in to 1960's "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon". Ray performs both songs in their entirety with as much gusto and energy that both songs require. The dog howls and other vocal sound effects in both recordings brought wild bursts of laughter and applause from the audience.
He introduces Harold Bradley and Mandy Barnett. Ray mentions that both he and Harold have the same first and middle names: Harold Ray. Harold discusses his entry into the music business and how his first recording sessions took place in Chicago on a Pee Wee King recording in the late 1940s. He explains that, in those years, there wasn't much of an opportunity to make records in Nashville and that his career began prior to Nashville becoming known as Music City, USA. Harold's first session in Nashville happened in 1950. Ray asks how Harold and Mandy joined forces...
The story is tied to Owen Bradley (Harold's brother) and a stage show called Always...Patsy Cline. The musical began in 1994 at the Ryman Auditorium. Mandy portrayed and sang like the late Patsy Cline so convincingly that, from that point forward, Mandy's name for some people became synonymous with Patsy Cline...some say the two have become inextricably linked. Mandy, according to most sources, has portrayed Patsy Cline in more than 500 performances dating back to 1994. She was one of the longest running frequent guest performers at the Grand Ole Opry...appearing hundreds of times in a nearly 30 year period. She was officially inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in November 2021...after having made her first guest appearance there 27 years earlier in 1994. It'll probably always remain a mystery as to why it took the Opry nearly 30 years to officially make her a member.
Mandy and Harold perform "Crazy" and "I'm Confessin'". Ray closes the show with "Harry the Hairy Ape". The episode has a decidedly classic country overtone...specifically a vintage 1960's flavor. This, of course, had a lot to do with the special guests being Harold Bradley and Mandy Barnett, a recurring subject matter of Patsy Cline, and the fact that Ray performed songs from the 1960's, too.
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