Hello all Ray Stevens fans!! We're a few days from Christmas 2022 and for a lot of us we're going to be under a sub-arctic deep freeze for several days beginning early Friday morning. Wind chill readings will reach something like -30 and so it's not sure what's to come in the days ahead. Some people are getting blizzard/white-out conditions while others will get light snow (by comparison) aided by the sub-zero wind chills. Earlier this evening Ray Stevens shared his YouTube playlist of Christmas songs. The playlist contains 46 publicly available songs and Christmas-themed performances but there are 14 videos not available. My guess is those particular videos were once part of the playlist but weren't watched/shared as much and therefore become private/hidden. The playlist is a combination of music video productions and live performances from his CabaRay Nashville television series. There are various renditions of "Santa Claus is Watching You" in the playlist...including an audio of the 1962 recording, a live performance from the 1980's on Nashville Now, the 1985 music video, and a performance on CabaRay Nashville. Although Ray recorded an album of comical, funny Christmas songs he also recorded an album of traditional, serious Christmas songs plus an album of both funny and serious Christmas songs. The album titles are Ray Stevens Christmas Through a Different Window; Ray Stevens Christmas; and the third is titled Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me. To view the YouTube playlist click HERE.
This particular Christmas album features 10 recordings. The entire album is great but some of the songs I'm highlighting will be among your best of the best I'm sure. First off there's the title track, "Mary and Joseph and the Baby and Me". Ray made this into a playful music video...complete with stuffed animals...and it's one of the few original Christmas songs to come out of Nashville in decades. Jeff Bates and a disc jockey by the name of John Ritter (not to be confused with the late actor) wrote the song. Ray performed it on his CabaRay Nashville television series, actually, before the song was released on CD. Ray follows this serious recording... yes, in spite of the amusing looking video, it's still a serious recording... Ray follows it with 6 consecutive Christmas songs that range from whimsical to hilarious: first off there's the back-to-back recordings of traditional Christmas songs - "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer" and "Frosty the Snowman". We then have "All I Want for Christmas is My Two Front Teeth" a recording which had previously appeared on Ray's 2012 9-CD box set, Encyclopedia of Recorded Comedy Music. We next have Ray and his marvelous cover of "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer" which also comes from the 2012 9-CD box set. Track 6 is the original, "Claws (A Cat's Letter to Santa)". It's from the pen of Taylor Craven and Tommy Moore. Track 7 is Ray's outstanding rendition of "All I Want For Christmas is You"... the same song written and popularized by pop singer Mariah Carey. If you're wanting to hear a different rendition of the song... done completely serious but in the Ray Stevens type of style... look for the embed of the audio track at the end of this blog entry!
The final three songs on the 2016 CD are all originals, too. "Merry Christmas" is a statement on political correctness and how it's perfectly fine to publicly say "Merry Christmas" in addition to, or instead of, the generic Happy Holidays or Season's Greetings. The song had become a hit on Ray's YouTube channel prior to it being released on CD. "Christmas Will Be Just Another Lonely Day" is a song from the 1960s that Brenda Lee had previously recorded. She released her recording of it in 1964. Ray's music arrangement compliments the lyrical sorrow. The album's closer is a song Ray had written in the early 1960s and Perry Como, of all people, ended up recording it... the spiritually themed "Christmas Bells in the Steeple". Now, then, are you all ready for Ray's fabulous rendition of "All I Want for Christmas is You"??? Here it is...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Show your appreciation for the music of Ray Stevens...leave a comment...