May 21, 2023

Ray Stevens: This CD is Silver...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens! I'm quite sure you're familiar with the photo of Ray that appears on this 1998 release. This compilation celebrates a Silver Anniversary is year...released 25 years ago by Varese Sarabande. Titled The Country Hits Collection it randomly collects mostly album tracks from several Ray Stevens albums of the early to mid 1970s and gives them a spotlight. This was important in 1998 because the vinyl albums those album tracks originally appeared on were, and still are, out of print but much, if not all, of the songs on this collection have since become available digitally on the internet. Does it mean this collection is no longer a vital item in your Ray Stevens collection due to most of the songs being readily available online? Of course not! This CD comes with a fold-out booklet full of commentary/notes and numerous photos of Ray...and that right there is cause for fans to seek out this CD on various online stores or auction sites. If you're a fan in the manner in which I happen to be then reading liner notes/essays/commentary about Ray is just as good as having the music. I recently purchased an issue of Country Music Magazine from 1981, for example...yes, the magazine is 42 years old this year, but what drove me to purchase the magazine on eBay is because it features an article/interview of Ray Stevens. It had been available online for awhile from various sellers but I happened to see one at the right price and bought it...it arrived in the mail last week. The magazine cover features Burt Reynolds. I make mention of this because, although it's a magazine and not an album, because it has an interview with Ray Stevens I decided to purchase the magazine. So, then, if you're like I am and want to read about Ray and his music but you don't have the CD, Country Hits Collection, go ahead and purchase it if only for the fold-out cover/liner notes and photos. 


The liner notes in the CD's fold-out cover were written by a writer named Mike Ragogna. As far as photos are concerned there's a close-up photo of Ray from 1970 and there are a couple of images of advertisements that originally appeared in music trade magazines. There are 16 recordings on the CD and the first 5 tracks were single releases: "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down" (1969); "Turn Your Radio On" (1971); "Nashville" (1973); "Misty" (1975); and "Young Love" (1976). The back of the CD lists all 16 songs, the songwriters, and which album the song originally appeared on and the album catalog number and for the single releases it also includes the catalog number for the single release and it's peak in Billboard's pop or country chart. The back of the CD doesn't provide chart data for Easy-Listening/Middle-of-the-Road/Adult-Contemporary nor are Billboard's competitors included (Record World, Cashbox, Radio and Records). Some of the songs were issued as B-sides...and there's one song on here, "Piece of Paradise", that had only appeared as a B-side on a single release and was never part of any album. This collection remains the only showcase on CD for that 1975 B-side. It's A-side, "Indian Love Call", isn't on this collection, ironically. 

Here are the 16 songs on this 1998 CD...

1. Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down
2. Turn Your Radio On
3. Nashville
4. Misty
5. Young Love
6. She Belongs To Me; 1970
7. Losin' Streak; 1973
8. Just One of Life's Little Tragedies; 1973
9. Easy Loving; 1973
10. Sunshine; 1975
11. Take Care of Business; 1975
12. Undivided Attention; 1973
13. Destroyed; 1973
14. Loving You On Paper; 1970
15. Piece of Paradise
16. Deep Purple; 1975

"Young Love" happened to be a single release by Barnaby Records on Ray Stevens in December 1975 and it was his next-to-last single for the company. His very last single for Barnaby would be "Mockingbird Hill" backed with "Lady of Spain" early in 1976 but by then he had joined Warner Brothers Records and was recording his debut album for the label in the early months of 1976...which, my guess is, that very last single for Barnaby, "Mockingbird Hill", was something contractually obligated which is why there's next to no publicity for the release in any music trade magazine of that time period. Research I've done on Ray Stevens indicates that early 1976, in music trade magazines, centers around his debut single and album for Warner Brothers and I've not come across any mention of Ray's "Mockingbird Hill" or "Lady of Spain" recordings but we know the recordings were issued on a single. Their release on a vinyl single is why you'll see one or both of those songs on various compilation albums released on Ray Stevens.     

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