January 15, 2023

Ray Stevens: The Funny Faces and Comical Creations...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Here we are on January 15th of the brand new year...and a somewhat newer photo from Ray Stevens emerged on his social media earlier today. I refer to it as somewhat newer because it's a fairly recent photo of Ray making a funny face on the stage of his CabaRay showroom just minutes west of downtown Nashville. In the photo, as you see on the left hand side of the screen, Ray is holding his microphone up to his ear. A similar pose surfaced last year of Ray intently looking inside the top of the microphone. Down through the decades Ray Stevens has often given us a lot of funny faces and comical creations. On numerous album covers he's given us funny facial expressions and on almost all of his comedy albums, specifically, he's appeared in costume as some sort of historical figure or as a parody of something widely known in pop culture in general. For example, for his 1997 comedy album, Hum It, he appeared on the cover dressed as Whistler's Mother. The added touch of a basketball referee blowing a whistle added to the visual joke. When that comedy album was originally released a lot of people (music historians included) missed the Whistler's Mother connection and immediately remarked that Ray was dressed as Mother Bates from the Psycho movies. 

Now, going back to 1962 for example, we have this publicity photo of Ray Stevens that Mercury Records used in a lot of weekly music publications of the time period and I've seen this image appear on a number of albums, too. If you know your Ray Stevens music history then you know that 1962 is the year that Mercury Records released the first full length album on Ray titled 1,837 Seconds of Humor. That album's centerpiece was "Ahab the Arab" which hit the Top-10 on both the Pop Hot 100 and the Rhythm and Blues chart. The album also features "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills", "Saturday Night at the Movies", "Furthermore", and "A Hermit Named Dave" just to name a few. Ray recorded a rendition of "When You Wish Upon a Star" but for whatever reason it wasn't placed on his 1962 album or his This is Ray Stevens album in 1963. There are a couple of other wacky photos of Ray Stevens from the early 1960's time period but none was as ubiquitous as the black and white photo. That photo even appeared on the cover of sheet music. 

I've been a Ray Stevens fan for more than 30 years and do you know that I don't have any information as to the origin of this particular photo?? Through the process of elimination I know it's based upon his 1985 recording, "The Pirate Song", from his I Have Returned album. What I don't know, as of yet, is where this photo come from. I don't know if it's from a performance of the song on an episode of Nashville Now or if it's from an awards show. Ray often performed a song, or, co-hosted, or presented an award, on various award shows with the most appearances on the Music City News awards. That photo could be from a Music City News telecast but I don't know. Ray performed the song in a television special called The Country Comedy Hour. I know of this because Ray has the performance uploaded on his YouTube channel. They say that performance is from the early 1990s. I don't know if that television special ever aired, though, or if it was a pilot that was unsold since I've searched various online search engines and can't find any information about it...beyond the video clip Ray posted which does show up in search results. Although it's a black and white photo note the colorful parrot on his shoulder. This photo could be from a rehearsal of that Country Comedy Hour...but the pirate uniform looks just a little different than how it appears on the video clip, at least in my eyes it does. Ray made an official music video of that song in 2000. Here's the performance from the comedy special in the early 1990s. Comedy duo Williams and Ree, as well as, among others, Ruth Buzzi, appear in this performance as additional pirates. 




This photo is one of the most wildest of Ray Stevens. He is playing the role of Coy from his 1980 recording, "Shriner's Convention". The photo was taken while he rode out on stage at his former Branson, Missouri theater. The motorcycle has appeared in dozens of performances of the song and it appeared in Ray's 1995 Platinum selling Direct-to-VHS movie, Get Serious!. That movie includes the official music video of "Shriner's Convention". A similar photo of Ray on the motorcycle graces the cover of his 1993 Double-Platinum VHS, Ray Stevens Live!. If you've ever seen the album cover of Shriner's Convention an illustration of the motorcycle appears on the cover. The color scheme of the motorcycle and the name, Coy, written across the front of it first appeared on that album cover in 1980 and so the illustration of the motorcycle was the basis for the real motorcycle that Ray would drive out on stage. I believe the first appearance of the motorcycle in a performance of the song happened during the Music City News Country Awards in 1980. I'd heard that Ray donated the motorcycle to a local Shriners organization in the early 2000's and so it's no longer in his possession.   

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