Hello all you Ray Stevens fans!! Happy Easter 2023!! It hasn't been a tradition but every so often on Easter I spotlight the 1990 Ray Stevens comedy album, Lend Me Your Ears. The reason I do will be quite obvious if you're familiar with the album's cover art. The album cover features a photo of Ray dressed as Marc Antony from the Julius Caesar play...holding a rabbit in front of the Parthenon replica in downtown Nashville. If you're familiar with your Shakespeare quotes then "...Friends, Romans, countrymen.. lend me your ears!!" should be one that leaps to mind right away.
As mentioned, this comedy album from Ray Stevens arrived in 1990. The album marked something of a new phase in Ray's career. He recently signed with Curb Records that year. Their first release on him was a compilation, His All Time Greatest Comic Hits, earlier in 1990. It has since become a Gold record (500,000 copies sold). This new phase began slowly but continued to build and I'm referring to the use of music videos in his career. Ray had previously released two music videos. "Santa Claus is Watching You" was the first in the mid 1980s followed in 1988 by "Surfin' U.S.S.R.". In 1990 he issued two separate music videos of songs from the 1990 album. "Help Me Make It Through the Night" and "Sittin' Up With the Dead" made their music video debut in 1990 and the following year found Ray Stevens in Branson, Missouri at his own music theatre. The addition of music video wasn't anything new to recording artists but when it come to Ray Stevens, who specializes in comedy/novelty songs filled with often zany lyrics and storylines, a music video is therefore a must-see. So, Ray began inserting music video performances into his stage shows and one thing led to another...resulting in the release, in 1992, of Comedy Video Classics on VHS. It spotlighted Ray's four previously issued music videos and another four brand new to fans. The VHS success, coupled with his successful concerts in Branson, meant that VHS/music video would take more of a front seat in Ray's career. Lend Me Your Ears and it's follow-up in 1991, Number One with a Bullet, were wonderful comedy albums but oddly enough both would become overshadowed by his VHS releases in 1992 and 1993. Those VHS tapes would get released through direct marketing, first, and then a year later they would get released to retail stores. This meant that Ray rode the success of several VHS tapes for at least 6 years. The VHS tapes released in the 1990s were big sellers for Ray at his Branson gift shop, through direct marketing, and in retail stores: Comedy Video Classics (1992), Amazing Rolling Revue (1992; not direct marketed), Ray Stevens Live! (1993), More Ray Stevens Live! (1993; not direct marketed) and Get Serious! (1995).
Lend Me Your Ears, however, was Ray's first studio album of the decade and given it's Easter Sunday I felt it appropriate to include a link to the YouTube playlist of the 1990 album. There are 10 songs.
In addition to the two that were turned into live action music videos there were a couple more that became limited animation music videos more than 10 years later. "Barbeque" and "This Ain't Exactly What I Had In Mind" become animated music videos. The album also features another song that fans of Ray have come to know: "Where Do My Socks Go?". Are you ready to hear Lend Me Your Ears?? All you have to do is click this LINK and it'll take you to the YouTube playlist!
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