August 14, 2023

Ray Stevens: Audio Diary 5

In this 5th installment of the Audio Diary series of blog posts, I'm spotlighting a 2015 recording from Ray Stevens which doubled as a salute/tribute to the comedy legacy of the late Jerry Clower...but first a little, brief backstory on Jerry Clower's friendship with Ray Stevens. 

In country music circles Ray Stevens and Jerry Clower are two of the most popular and beloved entertainers when it comes to country comedy. On YouTube their recordings are being heard by hundreds and thousands of people weekly. 

Jerry Clower, in his comedy stories, always said that he backed into show business. He said this because he didn't begin recording comedy albums until he was middle age. In fact he was perfectly content to remain a fertilizer salesman for the Mississippi Chemical Corporation. He had been born in 1926 and served in the Navy during World War Two. After his military duties he went to Mississippi State University and played college football while getting a degree in Agriculture. 

He worked with the 4-H and eventually found himself selling fertilizer. It was during one of his speaking engagements selling fertilizer to potential customers that his speech was recorded...for you see, during his speaking engagements, he would tell wild stories about his youth, his military experiences, his years playing football, and the misadventures of a family with the last name of Ledbetter. One thing led to another and his monologue found it's way to music executives. When MCA Records came calling in 1971 he was 44 years old and having no previous desires of being a comedian or even a celebrity of any kind he found himself on a major record label, receiving his first of several Gold albums, and within several years he was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry (1973) and the rest is history. He passed away in August 1998...a month shy of turning 72. 

Ray and Jerry's paths crossed multiple times on various country music awards shows and talk shows. In fact, in 1986, the two of them and Minnie Pearl got together and recorded "Southern Air", a comedy song dealing with a run down airplane where Jerry plays the part of the Captain and Minnie plays the role of the stewardess...with Ray playing the role of the meek passenger fighting off Minnie's flirtatious behavior as well as commenting on all of the in flight chaos going on around him. Ray was a labelmate of Jerry Clower at MCA for five years (1984-1989). 

In 1995 Ray issued a Direct-to-VHS movie titled Get Serious!. In this movie Jerry Clower appears several times in the role of the Colonel.. the boisterous manager of Ray's career who spends more time relaxing and taking it easy instead of overseeing Ray's career and professional reputation which, in the storyline, is being trashed and tarnished by a new, yet, humorless music executive (played by Michael Airington). Here's Jerry Clower as Ray's manager early in the movie as Ray is wearing his Gitarzan costume.


In 2015 Ray released the comedy album, Here We Go Again!. It was his first album of comedy in four years. The album featured the audio tracks of the hit YouTube music videos "Taylor Swift is Stalking Me" and "You Didn't Build That"...it also features the song "There Must Be a Pill For This" which became a YouTube hit video a number of years later after Ray performed it on his CabaRay Nashville television series and uploaded the performance onto YouTube. The 2015 comedy album also includes the song, "Knock Him Out, John". The title of the song is a phrase heard in the first comical story released on Jerry Clower in 1971. The story about the raccoon hunt and how the hunters were led to believe that the dog chased a raccoon up into a tree...only to discover it was a lynx...the one that discovered that it was a lynx was a man that Jerry identified as John Eubanks. In the story Jerry says the phrases 'knock him out, John!!!' and 'shoot this thing!!' many times as the story reaches it's climax. Ray recorded "Knock Him Out, John" as a tribute to Jerry and I'm sharing the audio track below. 

In the song, Ray puts Jerry's story about the raccoon hunt to music and uses phrases from the story to give added highlight. One of the best things is Ray's impression of Jerry Clower's famous holler. In the song the holler is timed with the music and you'll hear it at various moments throughout the song. Don't be surprised if after hearing the song you don't find yourself trying to do the holler. 

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