Hello Ray Stevens fans!! While I was sick with left lung Pneumonia the legendary Ray Stevens participated in an interview with WSM radio's Bill Cody. The interview aired on the July 20th episode of Bill's program titled Coffee, Country, and Cody. Charlie Mattos is Bill's on-air assistant/producer and perhaps an unofficial co-host...and they're joined by entertainment journalist, Kelly Sutton.
The interview is very, very engaging with Ray in top form cracking jokes and coming up with expressions throughout the interview that are unique to him. Bill opened the show with a snippet of Ray performing "Nashville", a single Ray released in 1973. Bill asks Ray where all he's done a show. Ray responded that when he was younger, and it's something he specifically said he'd never do at his current age, but he boarded a plane and flew practically all over the globe...landing in one airport, seeing some of the sights of the city he was in, and then boarding a different flight for some place else...and it ultimately culminated in a tour overseas. The places he visited and the weeks away from his home inspired him to write "Nashville". Ray offered the remark that he feels Tasmania is Australia's version of Las Vegas.
Ray and Bill speak of the CabaRay showroom and Bill asks Ray if he's ever returned to 17th and Grand Avenue since moving his operations to the CabaRay. Ray commented that he hadn't gone back to the area since officially tagging his CabaRay as his new base of operations (the facility includes his offices, a video production studio, and an audio recording studio). Well, technically, the music video studio is actually the CabaRay stage. If Ray shoots a music video or tapes a commercial for online play the production staff incorporates green screen technology... a green screen will be placed in the background while Ray tapes his part on stage at the CabaRay... and they put in the backgrounds to the videos in post production.
Bill mentions Ray's history with Music Row real estate. Ray comments that he got interested in real estate due to Owen Bradley and Chet Atkins. At one point in time Ray probably owned 40 percent of the land and, or, the buildings throughout the Music Row section of Nashville. I remember a writer for a music magazine half-jokingly refer to Ray as the Landlord of Music Row. When Bill asked about the unique spelling of his showroom Ray credited his late brother, John Ragsdale, with coming up with spelling it CabaRay rather than the more affluent, Cabaret. Ray tells the origins of "Everything is Beautiful" and Bill brings up the recent death of Jerry Bradley.
Ray went into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2019 and one of the fellow inductee's was Jerry Bradley. Ray spoke of how his 1980 comedy album, Shriner's Convention, featured art work on both the front and back of the cover and that it was Jerry Bradley's idea to have the song depicted in comic book form on the back of the cover and have an illustrated drawing of Ray in character as Coy on a motorcycle with hotel waitress, Charlene, on the front of the album cover. When you look on the back of the 1980 album you'll see Jerry credited with cover concept. Bill brings up Ralph Emery. Ray commented about how Ralph was one of the longest running members of the Nashville Breakfast Club, an informal gathering featuring Ray and numerous people having breakfast in various places around Nashville. It's not a weekly ritual, at least, I don't think it is...but I know that Ray once remarked that it was something of a tradition and that it began by accident in the mid 1980s sometime.
All in all it's a great interview but rather than go by my overview and opinion you can listen to the entire interview for yourselves by clicking the YouTube link HERE. The interview is just under 20 minutes.
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