Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2007. Show all posts

February 9, 2025

Ray Stevens: Revisiting the New Orleans Moon...

As I begin writing this blog entry we're an hour and fifteen minutes away from the start of Super Bowl LIX which is roman numeral talk for Super Bowl 59. The game is being played in New Orleans, Louisiana at the Superdome and so I thought it would a perfect tie-in to hype/promote the 2007 Ray Stevens tribute to the culture and music of New Orleans. It come in the form of the album New Orleans Moon. Ray, as is the norm, was the album's producer and music arranger. When you look on the back of the album you'll see that some of the songs feature credits specifically attributed to Ray on the songs "When The Saints Go Marching In", "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans", and half of the two song medley featuring a snippet of "Just a Closer Walk With Thee". They're listed as PD/Arrangement which means the songs are in the public domain. Ray would later record a full version of "Just a Closer Walk With Thee" for a gospel album nearly a decade later. Ray wrote the opening instrumental track which runs 1 minute, 8 seconds titled "Prelude to Way Down Yonder in New Orleans". The remainder of the album is vocal. Ray co-wrote which Chuck Redden the title track, "New Orleans Moon". The album, for those that weren't following Ray's career at the time, was sort of like the peak of his celebration of the music and culture of that particular area of Louisiana. It had began rather unofficially in 2005 during the Hurricane Katrina disaster. Ray performed on some local fund raisers in the hurricane's aftermath and mentioned in news reports that he'd lost some property due to the hurricane and the flooding. Ray, Buddy Kalb, and Chuck Redden had written a satirical song titled "The New Battle of New Orleans" which was released as a single-only in 2005. It was a parody of the classic Johnny Horton recording, "The Battle of New Orleans". 

Chuck was the main writer of the parody and it contains a lot of lyrics some may find confrontational or controversial. Ray and Buddy Kalb made some slight variations to the song which means that some lyrics were omitted and new lyrics added. The single received some publicity but it set in motion what ultimately became 2007's New Orleans Moon. In the meantime the 2005 single has since became a rarity. The 2007 album is a serious release and so the 2005 single wasn't placed on the album. In the title track Ray does a vocal impression of Louis Armstrong near the end of the song. In the song Armstrong is referenced to as Satchmo, his nickname. The album does feature Ray's version of the Johnny Horton classic, "The Battle of New Orleans", by the way. Some of the other songs on the album are "Louisiana", "Louisiana Man", "New Orleans", and "Basin Street Blues". 

Here's Ray Stevens singing "New Orleans Moon" from an episode of his CabaRay Nashville television series. Keep in mind that you can go to YouTube and listen to the entire album, too. 

May 12, 2023

Ray Stevens: "New Orleans Moon" CabaRay Nashville performance...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens and those of you that stop by for pure curiosity sake. A couple of days ago Ray's social media outlets featured a performance from him from an episode of his CabaRay Nashville television series. The performance is of "New Orleans Moon", a song he co-wrote and recorded in 2007 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated the city in 2005. In fact, Ray recorded and released an entire album of songs celebrating Louisiana and specifically, New Orleans, in 2007 and he titled it New Orleans Moon. Ray co-wrote "New Orleans Moon" with a writer named Chuck Redden. When Ray uploaded the performance onto his social media pages there were quite a few that reacted with surprise and a constant reply from people was "I'd never heard this song before...". Whenever I read comments like that I either roll my eyes or, more than likely, I take the opportunity to educate those who leave those kinds of comments as to where they can find a song or an album from Ray that they've never heard of. 

You can find the New Orleans Moon album at Ray's website inside his online music store. He doesn't provide digital/Mp3 audio and so you'll have to purchase the compact disc (CD) if you purchase it from his online store. Now, if you choose, you can listen to the songs from the album on a number of music streaming sites. You can find it on Spotify, for example. If you're a fan of Ray I'd urge you to create a free Spotify account, if you don't have one, and add Ray's music page to your favorites and listen to Ray's songs, free of charge, and create your own music library of Ray Stevens songs. Why? Well, the amount of plays that Ray receives goes into the year-end totals that Spotify reveals and we, as fans of Ray, like to see his page and his music recognized. You can also do a YouTube search for the album title and once you do the search results will provide you with the album playlist. 

June 18, 2022

Ray Stevens: New Orleans Moon...15 Years Later...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! One of the albums that Ray Stevens released in the decade known as the Aughts (January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2009) was New Orleans Moon in 2007. The album come along in the aftermath of the devastating Hurricane Katrina. Ray performed several charitable concerts in 2005 and 2006 when he was performing concerts at his Branson, Missouri theater. He had returned to the theater in 2005 following a 12 year absence. According to Ray's 2014 memoir, he had rented/leased out the theater to an organization that put on a production called Country Tonite. This show, beginning in 1994, occupied Ray's theater under the name 'Country Tonite Theater' until 2003. The executives that ran the Country Tonite show wanted to move on to other things and so Ray took back the theater and returned to performing concerts there on a regular basis in 2005 following a year and a half renovation, remodeling, and other cosmetic changes. It was during this time period in Ray's career that he had significantly scaled back on his recordings. In his memoir, when it reaches this era in his career, he reveals that for a few months he felt like retiring. He said that the thoughts of retirement were centered around the fact that he'd recently turned 65 and "isn't that the age you're suppose to retire?" he asked himself. He didn't retire, of course, he returned to Branson for two seasons (2005 and 2006) and in 2007 he emerged with this New Orleans Moon album. If you know your Ray Stevens history then you'll know that while Ray was not born in Louisiana he definitely comes from the Southern culture...born and raised in Georgia. He was born in Clarkdale, Georgia but the family eventually moved to Albany, Georgia and then he ventured into Atlanta, Georgia by the late 1950s. The album kicks off with a brief instrumental performance called "Prelude to Way Down Yonder in New Orleans" (composed by Ray) which leads into "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans". 

The album's title track, "New Orleans Moon", comes from the pens of Ray Stevens and Chuck Redden. Chuck, being a resident/native of the area, become associated with Ray in 2005 when Ray and Buddy Kalb partially re-wrote Chuck's song, "The New Battle of New Orleans". When the song was released as a CD single by Curb Records in 2005 Chuck, Ray, and Buddy were the credited songwriters. That song was a topical song aimed at the political figures in office at the time of Hurricane Katrina. Ray and Buddy changed some of the lyrics and added additional lyrics so it would fit Ray's style. Ray does a brief vocal impression of Louis Armstrong in "New Orleans Moon"...it'll sneak up on you so anticipate it. The song closes with a Dixieland Jazz instrumental solo. The trumpet player on the album is George Tidwell. Ray plays the piano/keyboards and Bass. Songwriter Chuck Redden has since provided Ray with several other songs over the years. In case you're wondering...no, 2005's "The New Battle of New Orleans" isn't featured on 2007's New Orleans Moon.


Since the CD is a salute/tribute to New Orleans and Louisiana, in general, there are a lot of cover songs on here that are iconic to that region. "Louisiana Man", from the pen of Doug Kershaw, is a classic romp first popularized by The Kershaw Brothers and then recorded by Connie Smith...George Jones and Gene Pitney recorded a duet version of the song...other recording artists of the time period took their turn at recording the Cajun-flavored swamp romp. Ray gives us his renditions of Hank Williams' "Jambalaya", a cover of the up-tempo pop song, "New Orleans", Jimmy Driftwood's "The Battle of New Orleans", popularized by Johnny Horton, Ray gives "When The Saints Go Marching In" a new arrangement, Ray covers Randy Newman's "Louisiana", and there's also "Basin Street Blues"... 


The album was originally released on Ray's Clyde Records label in 2007. Curb Records took over distribution of the album not long afterward. The audio tracks were uploaded onto YouTube a number of years ago but Curb Records uploaded the audio tracks on YouTube yesterday. I don't know if Curb had previously uploaded the existing audio tracks or not...but I do know they uploaded the audio tracks yesterday and I'm embedding a couple of them in this blog entry. Here's his take on "The Battle of New Orleans"...he did the song his way...it's not a carbon copy of Johnny Horton's rendition...


I'm closing the blog entry with Ray's rendition of "Louisiana". Now, this song comes from the 1970s and it's from the pen of Randy Newman. The song was originally written about the Louisiana flood of 1927. The song's official title was "Louisiana 1927". However, the song was more or less re-introduced to the public in 2005 in the Hurricane Katrina aftermath. Ray's rendition is stellar in my opinion. The entire New Orleans Moon 2007 album is fabulous, by the way. Visit YouTube and listen to it for yourselves.  

May 23, 2021

Ray Stevens sings "Makin' the Best of a Bad Situation"...

Hello to all the fans of Ray Stevens who stop by here. Earlier this afternoon Ray uploaded a performance of "Makin' the Best of a Bad Situation" from his CabaRay Nashville television show. Ray had originally recorded this song in 1986 and it appears on his Surely You Joust album. In this 1986 recording he sang it really up-tempo. The song's writer happened to have also written several up-tempo songs that Jerry Reed recorded...in fact, the 1986 Ray Stevens recording when I first heard it as a kid, had me thinking of Jerry Reed. In 2007 Ray re-recorded the song and changed the tempo from really fast to mid-tempo...actually it's like a ballad in comparison to the 1986 recording. The re-recording appears on Ray's 2007 comedy album, Hurricane. That's the album which features 7 new songs and 5 re-recordings of songs from a couple of his comedy albums from the 1980s, with "Makin' the Best of a Bad Situation" being one of those re-recordings. In this CabaRay Nashville performance, as mentioned, he sings it as it appears on the 2007 Hurricane album. The overall storyline of the song deals with a series of misfortunes that are dealt with in a humorous, often ironic, way. It's in the country comedy category for certain. 

September 30, 2019

Ray Stevens: The Road to the Country Music Hall of Fame, Part Twenty-Three...

One of the most devastating natural disasters occurred in 2005 by the name of Hurricane Katrina during late August. The rebuilding of that area was extensive (a major understatement on my part) and the controversy that erupted in the days, weeks, and months following the hurricane was also socially devastating. Accusations as well as credible evidence dealing with flawed or unsafe levee's led many to feel that the presence of human error in the construction of the levee's could have prevented the destruction that took place. There were other controversies surrounding the perceived belief that the local Government as well as the Federal Government were inept and deserved a lot of the blame.

Ray donated a lot of his time performing at charitable events...appearing on the Branson Cares telethon held on September 13, 2005. This fundraiser being held while Ray was still headlining his own theater in Branson (which he closed in November of the same year). In March of 2006 a song surfaced, regionally, from a writer named Chuck Redden which criticized the fury of anger directed at local Government and Federal Government...pointing at the 'come and save us' mentality of the citizens. The song, musically, is based on the Johnny Horton classic, "The Battle of New Orleans", but it's title is "The New Battle of New Orleans". There are two versions of this song...there is the one that Chuck recorded and then there's a slightly different version that Ray Stevens recorded. Chuck's rendition had some lyrical changes applied to it by Ray and Buddy Kalb in order to make it a little less confrontational and more easier to take when heard by a general, rather than regional, audience and so a lot of the cussing and what some may call off-color observations in the original lyrics were replaced with ones from Ray and Buddy. Curb Records distributed "The New Battle of New Orleans" in the spring of 2006 as a CD single.

The camera quality isn't too good...I had a little trouble with the settings...I'm probably due for an update but anyway that is the CD single that Curb Records distributed in March 2006. I came across the CD on eBay a number of years after it had been released. Even though I had been in Ray's fan club from 1995 until it closed down in 2002 and was aware that he had an internet cite I really don't remember Ray promoting this CD single, much, if at all. I don't remember it ever appearing in his on-line store, either. Regardless of the lack of publicity I purchased my copy of this obscure CD single and am so glad I did! Ray's image/likeness doesn't appear anywhere on the CD. As you can see the front of the CD has his name and a skyline of the city. The back of the CD features the same photo with songwriter/publisher credits. Curb Records had continued to distribute a number of Ray's projects prior to their release of "The New Battle of New Orleans" in March 2006. He did a series of limited animation music videos and they shown up in a couple of DVD releases: Gourmet Restaurant and Teenage Mutant Kung Fu Chickens. These animated videos do not feature live-action Ray Stevens...so they're different from the experimental live-action/limited animation music videos found on the Cartoon Video Collection from a few years earlier. Throughout much of 2006, as mentioned in previous installments, Ray had retreated into brief retirement...rarely did he do concerts, appear on television, or issue video content.

The devastation of Hurricane Katrina and all of the economical aid and charitable events tied to the hurricane elevated Louisiana, specifically New Orleans, into a beloved iconic city. Although the hurricane hit other areas of the region including numerous areas along the Gulf Coast it was New Orleans that was hit with the brunt of the storm and received the most horrific damage...more than 1,800 people died as a result of the hurricane.

Ray's thoughts of retirement were short-lived and he emerged with a wonderful album saluting Louisiana and New Orleans culture titled New Orleans Moon in the spring of 2007. This CD contains songs such as "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans", "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?", "Basin Street Blues", "New Orleans", and the title track he co-wrote with Chuck Redden, "New Orleans Moon". The CD doesn't feature "The New Battle of New Orleans" but it does feature Ray's cover of "The Battle of New Orleans", the classic hit by Johnny Horton. The CD doesn't feature a photo of Ray, either. I remember reading several articles that were shared on Ray's official website at the time of how much the region loved the CD and if I'm not mistaken he did several radio interviews with regional stations. Ray owned a house in Gulf Shores, Alabama and he often spoke of the destruction caused not only by Hurricane Katrina but other tropical storms that routinely pass through the area. The CD, issued on his own Clyde Records, was available through his on-line store exclusively from March until July 2007; after which the CD became available in all of the on-line retail music stores. The same month that New Orleans Moon became available all over the internet he issued a very catchy single filled with jazzy, New Orleans-style accompaniment titled "Ruby Falls" from the pen of his longtime friend and associate, Buddy Kalb. This single was issued as an Mp3 only...it wasn't part of any full length CD. The song is not entirely about the tourist attraction of Ruby Falls in Chattanooga, Tennessee but it uses the attraction's name to tell the story of a romance. I don't want to go into detail...it's one of those classic kinds of songs with a lyrical twist...so if I write anymore about it I'll spoil the satisfaction you're sure to get when you hear it for yourselves. You can find the Mp3 single on-line.

Ray closed out 2007 with another digital single...a song titled "Hurricane". Structurally the song's comparable to "The Streak" but this time around a television news anchor, a parody of Wolf Blitzer, asks three different reporters stationed at various locales to describe the chaos and interview passersby. The person interviewed each time turns out to be the same guy...often dropping one-liners and counting pigs as they fly by. CNN is the focal point of the satire as well as the bizarre practice mostly every news agency has of placing reporters at the scene of hurricanes, blizzards, and tornadoes as they're happening. A full-length Hurricane CD came along early in 2008. This comedy album was a combination of all new material and re-recordings of songs he had issued more than 20 years ago. The all-new material happened to be: "Hurricane", "Sucking Sound", "The Cure", "Hey Bubba Watch This!", "Bubba the Wine Connoisseur", "Down Home Beach", and a cover of "Rub It In" (a song he published in the early '70s and had been a hit for Billy 'Crash' Craddock). The remaining five songs were re-recordings. The album cover shows an image of Ray from 1992's VHS, Comedy Video Classics, with the subtitle: 12 comedy songs that will blow you away!. The phrase "watch out for flying pigs" is featured on the album cover, too. Ray co-wrote the title track with Buddy Kalb as well as "Sucking Sound". Ray is also a co-writer on some of the re-recorded songs from the 1980s. Chuck Redden wrote "Down Home Beach" and co-wrote, with Buddy Kalb, "Bubba the Wine Connoisseur". Ray issued a couple more projects in 2008...a compilation CD titled Laughter is the Best Medicine. The CD, initially, was sold in gift shops at local hospitals.

The allure of this CD, for me anyway, was finally getting to hear "The P.S.A. Song". This is a song that I had heard about since some point in 1999 or early 2000. It was written and recorded during the time Ray was dealing with his brief bout with Prostate cancer. In a fan club newsletter there's a photo of Ray in a hospital gown and there's mention of a music video of some kind being taped but, to date, I've never seen it...and it could have been one of those instances where footage was taped but ultimately wasn't released. The song had never appeared on any of Ray's CDs until this Laughter is the Best Medicine compilation came along in 2008.

In the summer and fall months of 2008 another Ray Stevens project became available...an out of left-field salute to the music of Frank Sinatra...featuring new arrangements by Ray on nearly all of the songs. The title of the CD?? Ray Stevens Sings Sinatra...Say What?!?. Ray appears on the album cover dressed in pop-crooner attire...wearing a fedora, too. Some of the songs Ray recorded for the CD include: "All the Way", "That's Life", "High Hopes", "Young at Heart", "Witchcraft", "I Get a Kick Out of You", and "Strangers in the Night". The latter is one of the songs that features an arrangement similar to the original. Ray had slowly began doing concert appearances again...and I had the opportunity to attend one of those concerts in 2008 in Renfro Valley, Kentucky. It was my first Ray Stevens concert and it was there at the merchandise table that I purchased my copy of Ray's Sinatra CD. A lot of these CD's that Ray recorded on his own label during this time period would eventually make their way onto on-line stores all over the internet. Ray often issued his CD's through his own label, on his own website, and held exclusive rights to the product for the first couple of months before they became widely available elsewhere on-line. These CD's were never carried in traditional retail stores...they were only available through mail order from his website's store or from other on-line stores and sometimes the music was offered digitally as Mp3's as Ray was slowly but surely gaining a presence on the enormous world wide web.

On-line communities and video hosting sites were becoming massively popular. Chat rooms, websites, web-stores, and message boards dedicated to all manner of entertainment had come to dominate the way consumers listened to and purchased music, movies, books, and away from entertainment the internet impacted the way we pay bills, communicate, and receive our paychecks. Ever since the internet boom of the mid to late 1990s the music industry feared how easy it had become for people to gain access to music 'for free'. In the 2000s the internet and all manner of cellphone devices had become nearly inseparable to people as the television and remote control had been to previous generations. Ray, like others of his generation, didn't appreciate the fact that people were clicking links and getting songs for free. Eventually the music industry and those that own or operate internet sites found common ground, more or less, and Mp3 sales are being tracked as is the process of collecting data on how many times officially uploaded music video content is being streamed/watched on video hosting sites. This kind of data provides feedback and in many cases revenue for record companies as well as the artists themselves...the more times a video is played/accessed the more beneficial it can be to a recording artist and the visibility is enormous and immediate...no longer do recording artists have to wait for a radio station or a television station to add a song or music video to a 'playlist' before we decide that we like it or not. The internet, once thought of as an enemy of the music industry, has become the single biggest promotional tool...enabling artists that aren't able to get their music on the radio or promoted on television to bypass those avenues for the internet. Ray would eventually benefit strongly from the presence of the internet...but first there were some detours along the route to this potential advertising goldmine...and I'll speak of this in my next installment of this mini-blog series as I discuss Ray moving his career into directions he never saw coming!!

January 1, 2019

Listening to Ray Stevens songs, well, That's My Desire...

Well here it is 2019 and for my first blog post of the year I'm including a video clip from 2007...it's an interview of Ray Stevens by Ralph Emery and it took place on Ralph's television series at the time, Ralph Emery Live!. The series aired on RFD-TV for a number of years but there weren't a whole lot of episodes produced if I recall correctly. The series ran on RFD before it became part of our regular line-up of channels and so I'd never actually seen a complete episode. There's a call-in feature which is something that I've never really been a fan of. I prefer listening to the host and guest talk without the insertion of callers because 90 percent of the time they ask routine questions that no recording artist would have the answer to. One of the most asked by callers is "when are you going to be in ______ ??". You can fill in the blank with whatever town, city, or state you can think of. Artists do not make up their itinerary...this is left up to people known as road managers, or, they're simply referred to as the artist manager, in general. There is usually someone hired to book concert dates/personal appearances for the artist in addition to having someone or more likely an organization hired to publicize the artist, etc. etc.

Even though Ray likes to keep things "in-house", based on commentary I've read or heard from him in interviews, sometimes there's a need to go outside the inner circle and hire people that specialize in publicity and marketing and he'll do that if he feels it necessary. What all of that boils down to is most artists do not know where they're going to be appearing next until an itinerary becomes available (tour dates) and that held true for Ray whenever he went on the road...meaning that he didn't know, beforehand, where he was going to appear until it was part of a tour stop. Nevertheless callers who get the chance to speak to a recording artist will ultimately want to know if or when that artist will be appearing nearby but occasionally a caller will ask something detailed and reflective of their love of Ray's songs. The call-in's aren't featured in the video clip, though.

Those reading this and wondering if Ray is going to go on tour or anything in 2019 need only to remember that he now has his CabaRay showroom to perform in and so the fans will have to travel to Nashville to see him in person just as they traveled to Branson in the early 1990s when he was there.

The 2007 interview clip, though, doesn't feature any callers and it features several performances by Ray...one being "Ruby Falls"...a single-only release that year which it never made it's way onto any CD until fairly recently...the Bozo's Back Again project in 2011. It's the album's closing song. The video clip is 38 minutes in length. Given there's hardly any commercials in the video clip nor is there any call-in's from viewers the presentation is shorter than originally seen in 2007.



One of those that called the show back in 2007 uploaded their interaction with Ray and Ralph onto YouTube several years ago. This caller is more of an exception to the rule as he asked a question only the most dedicated of fans would wonder about...the caller asked...well, watch the video for yourselves...Ray appeared thrilled that someone knew something so obscure about his recording career...



Anyone confused with the title of this blog entry? Well...a couple days ago I did my usual on-line search for everything Ray Stevens and I came across something that sparked my curiosity and so I did some on-line, in-depth searching to learn more about what I was seeing. What I was seeing happened to be a link to Amazon's Mp3 store in my search results for Ray Stevens. Once I opened the link I was stunned to see that Ray is a guest vocalist on a project by a jazz pianist named Beegie Adair. This project is called Grover's Hat Project and it was on pre-order when I came across it a couple of days ago. The product page at Amazon shown that it's release date is today. So, earlier this morning, I visited Amazon and sure enough the material is available for purchase instead of pre-order. The project features Beegie playing piano accompanied by guest vocalists. I'm nowhere near knowledgeable about jazz or it's artists and so I had never heard of her until Ray Stevens was linked to her name. Grover's Hat Project can be purchased HERE. She enlists an eclectic mix of country oriented performers as guest vocalists and the project features 14 recordings and then there's one peculiar bonus track...

Ray is a featured vocalist on a song titled "That's My Desire" and the download of the song is 99 cents. I'll be purchasing the song later this morning but that's not all...the bonus track is an alternate version of "That's My Desire" but it's performed comically by Ray Stevens rather than seriously as heard on track six. Once you click the Amazon link you'll be able to purchase each version of the song or you can purchase the entire digital album. What a way to open up a New Year...with never before available recordings by Ray Stevens!

October 21, 2017

Some Vintage/New Ray Stevens Items...

Hello all...it's an early Saturday morning here as I type up this latest blog entry. This time around I'm blogging about a couple of vintage but new to me items from Ray Stevens. First off is a CD that Ray released 10 years ago that I never owned a copy of until now!! In 2007 he released a CD titled Hurricane. The CD features 12 songs...five of which are re-recordings of previous songs. At the time of the release I purchased the 7 original recordings, as Mp3's, but lately I began thinking of the physical copy of the CD...plus the fact that the Mp3's that I had previously purchased were lost on a computer I no longer operate...and so I purchased a CD copy of Hurricane about a week ago during one of Ray's web-store discount sales and it arrived in the mail yesterday.

The first six songs on the CD had never appeared on any previous Ray Stevens album and the same goes for track eleven. Tracks seven through ten and track twelve are the re-recordings. In order: "Hurricane", "Sucking Sound", "The Cure", "Bubba the Wine Connoisseur", "Hey Bubba Watch This!", and "Rub It In". Dedicated fans of Ray Stevens may take a moment and ponder over "Rub It In". Ray has long been linked to this song but until this 2007 CD was released he had never recorded it. In the early '70s Ray produced a version of the song recorded by it's writer, Layng Martine, Jr., and released it on Barnaby Records. Ray also published the song...which proved very beneficial...because the publisher of a song tags along with any artist that records the song. The version by it's writer didn't became a big hit but later on Billy "Crash" Craddock recorded the song and it became a monster hit. If you have the single or if you come across an image of it on-line you'll see Ray's publishing company credited as Ahab Music Company on the upper left hand side of the label sleeve. In the '80s and '90s the song's title was parodied in a long series of television commercials for Glade...their jingle was called 'Plug it In, Plug it In!". The seventh never before available song on the CD is "Down Home Beach". The re-recordings include: "Smokey Mountain Rattlesnake Retreat", "The Camping Trip", "Makin' The Best of a Bad Situation", "Stuck on You", and "Hugo the Human Cannonball". Four of those re-recordings were turned into limited animation music videos. For those that have seen those videos the recordings you hear originated on this Hurricane CD.

The second vintage item is truly a gem of obscurity and in very limited quantities. Long time readers of this fan created blog are aware of how I have complained over the years about the lack of cassette tape on eBay of studio albums Ray recorded during the hey day of cassette tape. I have a blue cassette tape of Boogity Boogity (the oldest cassette of Ray that I own; from 1974). Next in line is a 1980 cassette of Shriner's Convention. Then everything from 1984 to 2002 I have in cassette format, too...but that was until a couple of days ago...

Into my possession came a cassette copy of Don't Laugh Now, a 1982 Ray Stevens album. As you might know I already have all of Ray's studio albums in vinyl format starting with 1963's This is Ray Stevens and stopping with 1989's Beside Myself...but the cassette tape collection prior to 1984 is really small and I act like a kid in a candy store anytime I obtain something rare. I'm forever on the look out for cassette versions of 1981's One More Last Chance and 1983's Me. I know cassette tape was manufactured throughout the 1970s but I just never, hardly ever, come across anything on cassette from Ray during that time frame. Cassette versions of Losin' Streak, Nashville, and even Just For the Record have come up for sale on eBay but the prices are outrageous. Don't Laugh Now was just the right price! This is the album that contains the single releases "Written Down In My Heart" and "Where the Sun Don't Shine". The album opens up with "Such a Night"...a song that only recently became something of a staple in Ray's set lists during concerts. The album also includes "Country Boy, Country Club Girl" and one of my all-time favorites, "Oh, Leo Lady". I made the images small...you can always click them and a larger image should appear. If a larger image doesn't appear then the small image will just have to do.

As a reminder...tonight's episode of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville will guest star Charley Pride. I'll give my commentary about the episode in my next blog entry. I should have it up either late tonight or in the early morning. Here's the promo for the episode...


December 4, 2012

Ray Stevens: Golden LP Series, Part 34...

One of the natural disasters to have a major impact on a country's geography happened in 2005 with Hurricane Katrina. The aftermath of the hurricane spawned all sorts of inner fighting, looting, and all out chaos from many of the citizens in the Katrina ravaged areas. There was even verbal fighting among city leaders and local politicans. Studio album 34 arrived in March 2007 but it was preceded in 2005 by a CD single-only titled "The New Battle of New Orleans" which detailed all the negativity that took place in Katrina's aftermath. The song's main writer was Chuck Redden but later it was partially re-written by Ray and Buddy Kalb. The end result appeared on the single-only released by Curb Records.

In March 2007 New Orleans Moon was released on his own label, Clyde Records. It was issued as a digital download during the first few months prior to it's release on physical CD format in the summer of 2007. Ray did some local interviews and media appearances creating awareness for the project but he didn't do any national publicity. The project contains 11 recordings...one of those recordings is a medley featuring two songs blended into one performance. The medley is "St. James Infirmary" and "Just a Closer Walk With Thee", track 5. Things get started with the energetic "Way Down Yonder In New Orleans".

The title track, "New Orleans Moon", is a sentimental and crooning salute to the city and culture of New Orleans. There's even a surprise impression toward the end of the performance of Louis Armstrong, referred to as Satchmo. The song was written by Ray and Chuck Redden.

One of the things that you'll notice when listening to this tribute CD is that Ray performs the songs pretty much exactly the way they should be performed...there's a lot of gusto, excitement, swing, Dixieland, and heartbreak found in the originals that Ray captures in his versions, too. "New Orleans Moon" is the only new song on the project while the rest are his versions of famed songs about Louisiana and New Orleans, in particular. I have the digital download Mp3 album. The reason is the Mp3 was released first, in March 2007, while the CD came along in July 2007. I had no idea if a CD would ever be released considering the technological changes going on in the music industry and so I purchased the Mp3 version of New Orleans Moon as soon as possible. I still don't own a copy of the physical CD, yet.

A highlight, among the many, is "Louisiana". It's the famed song written by Randy Newman about the Mississippi River flood of 1927 which now carried the perception that the Federal Government in 2005 had done little to help the suffering that took place after Hurricane Katrina. The lyrics mention Calvin Coolidge, the President at the time of the 1927 flood. The CD closes with a homesick lament titled "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?" which was featured in a late '40s movie titled New Orleans and it featured Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, and a cast of many. According to research, Holiday performed the song in the movie. The recording artists weren't technically billed as the stars of the film even though they feature heavily on movie posters of the time period. The stars of the movie were Arturo de Cordova and Dorothy Patrick.

Most of the songs that I've mentioned so far are ballads. There are several uptempo songs on here, too. In this category we have the rocker "New Orleans" as well as the Hank Williams classic, "Jambalaya". Staying with the country sound there's his cover of "Louisiana Man", a classic that's been recorded by a whole host of artists but closely associated with the Kershaw Brothers as well as Connie Smith. If these gems weren't enough we have his take on the Johnny Horton classic, "The Battle of New Orleans", from the pen of Jimmy Driftwood and then there's the amazing "When The Saints Go Marching In" and the mid-tempo "Basin Street Blues".

New Orleans Moon was Ray's second non-comical CD in a row, following 2004's Thank You. In 2006 Curb Records had issued two DVD's that I mentioned in a previous Golden LP Series entry. Each DVD consisted of 5 limited animation music videos of mostly comical songs...there was one non-comical offering, "Misty". The DVD's were titled Gourmet Restaurant and Teenage Mutant Kung Fu Chickens. The animation was done by Randy Cullers. Would Ray's next CD be a return to comedy/novelty or would it stay in the ballad/non-comical category? We'll find out in the next installment of the Golden LP Series!

October 24, 2011

The Entertaining Ray Stevens, Part 2...

One of the CD's from the Entertaining Ray Stevens is New Orleans Moon, a collection released in 2007 which features marvelous recordings from Ray centering on all things Louisiana...specifically New Orleans and it's music/culture. I've written about this big easy CD several times so I won't spend a lot going over what I've already covered. I'll supply a link to Ray's web-store for those who want to purchase a copy of the CD. On Sunday Night Football the New Orleans Saints clobbered the Indianapolis Colts by a score of 62-7! In reflection of that I decided to highlight Ray's New Orleans CD from a few years ago once again. I remember quite well when this CD was released...and I remember the confusion I felt when very little hype/publicity came for the CD outside of the New Orleans area. I don't know if Ray did any concerts in the Southern states or not that year...but the CD deserves to be known by more people than just the dedicated fans. The collection features the one new song, the title track "New Orleans Moon", and the rest are his versions of songs associated with Louisiana. The song was written by Ray and Chuck Redden. Those who pay attention to songwriter credits will recognize Chuck's name on several other songs that Ray's recorded within the last several years. Chuck wrote "Midnight in Baghdad", a song found on Ray's We The People CD from last year. On Spirit of '76, Ray's CD from early this year, Chuck co-wrote "November Storm" with Ray and Buddy Kalb. On the Hurricane CD that Ray released in 2008 Chuck wrote "Down Home Beach" and co-wrote "Bubba, The Wine Connoisseur" with Ray and Buddy Kalb. Ray and Buddy rewrote a lot of the lyrics of Chuck Redden's "The Real Battle of New Orleans" in 2005. Ray released it as a CD single under the alternate title "The New Battle of New Orleans".

Here's the link to Ray's web-store where you can see a track list for the New Orleans Moon CD.

From the sounds of New Orleans we travel back to the sounds of screams...1965's spooky novelty single from Ray Stevens titled "Mr. Baker, the Undertaker". It's Halloween week all across the country...climaxing on Halloween night: October 31st. A lot of towns celebrate Halloween on the actual holiday...but a lot of other towns do the annual Halloween thing on the Thursday preceding the holiday. On October 27th it will be what's called Beggar's Night around here...where people dress up in costumes and go door to door getting candy. As mentioned, other places do this Beggar's Night on the actual Halloween night. I have no idea why Beggar's Night has always been on Thursdays in my area but that's the way it's been for decades upon decades. "Mr. Baker, the Undertaker" tells the story of a mortician's love for his work. It's filled with a lot of mortician jokes and funeral home references as one could imagine. The song features a repetitious background choir of voices singing the title of the song after almost every line. You'll be able to tell that the choir of voices is Ray who often over-dubbed his own voice to create a harmony effect. He doesn't do this a lot these days but once upon a time he did.

In addition to "Mr. Baker, the Undertaker" Ray's also recorded other Halloween-style songs. "Laughing Over My Grave" is currently available as an Mp3 on Amazon. It became available in August and I mentioned it a few blogs ago. The song isn't comical in the same way Mr. Baker is but it has it's funny moments. It's more or less a love song about a woman who's had enough of a man's lying and cheating and she's out for justice. The comical aspect comes from how Ray delivers some of the lines when he's playing the part of the fearful husband and what his wife may be capable of doing to him. You can purchase the Mp3 for only 99 cents at Amazon's Mp3 store.

It was around this same era when Ray recorded the "Rockin' Teenage Mummies" as well. That particular novelty song dealt with a group of mummies that make it big as rock singers...eventually leading to an appearance on Ed Sullivan's show. It wouldn't be until 1988 that a Halloween theme found it's way into a Ray Stevens song and it was accomplished with "The Booger Man", a bluesy comical song describing the legend of many people's nightmares. The song is on his 1988 album, I Never Made a Record I Didn't Like, which is out of print. The CD version was released in 1990...which has long been out of print. There has never been an Mp3 reissue and so a lot of people's best bet is to track down the album on eBay and invest in a record player as I did several years ago. In 1990 Ray recorded "Sittin' Up With the Dead" and to date that's been the last song he's recorded that could fit in with the overall Halloween concept of scary stories, ghosts, graveyards, etc. etc. He made a music video of the song in 1990 and given that it's been kept in print you can easily find an Mp3 of the song on Amazon. The video that Ray shot in 1990 and uploaded onto You Tube in 2009 is located below. Those familiar with 1992's Comedy Video Classics will know right away where this video was lifted from.

April 4, 2011

Ray Stevens and the New Orleans Moon...

Released almost 4 years ago, New Orleans Moon is the glorious salute to Louisiana culture from Ray Stevens. The CD came along in the spring of 2007, available exclusively at first at Ray's web-site, but it was never publicized much outside of a few places. It was released nationally in July 2007. I remember the title track, "New Orleans Moon", was making the rounds on a few radio stations in Louisiana based on news releases by Ray's web-site. Aside from this localized publicity no major national publicity followed. I don't know if the lack of national publicity was did by design or not...songs that salute a specific region of the country might not play well nationally and so it makes more sense to publicize a CD like this in the area in which it's designed to pay tribute to and perhaps that's what Ray did. "New Orleans Moon" was written by Ray Stevens and Chuck Redden.

The CD is filled with songs about Louisiana...specifically New Orleans...and it's one of Ray's few latter-day CD's which features exclusively non-comical performances. New Orleans Moon features 11 tracks...one of the official titles for one of the songs on the CD is "Preleude to Way Down Yonder in New Orleans/Way Down Yonder in New Orleans". "New Orleans Moon" is great and the rest of the CD is his versions of quite a few Louisiana/New Orleans songs. Ray does a brief impression of Louis Armstrong on the title track by the way!

While most of the songs are ballads there are a few up-tempo songs...one that stands out is "New Orleans"...another is "When the Saints Go Marching In". The CD features a medley: "St. James Infirmary" and "Just a Closer Walk With Thee" are blended together. Ray covers "Louisiana", "Louisiana Man", "Jambalaya", and "The Battle of New Orleans" while also covering "Basin Street Blues".

The track list on the CD appears in different order from the track list on the Mp3 digital download. For example, the CD opens up with "Basin Street Blues" while the digital download CD opens up with "Way Down Yonder In New Orleans". Here's the track list as it appears on the digital download CD:

1. Way Down Yonder in New Orleans
2. New Orleans Moon
3. Basin Street Blues
4. When The Saints Go Marching In
5. St. James Infirmary/Just a Closer Walk With Thee
6. Jambalaya
7. Louisiana
8. Louisiana Man
9. New Orleans
10. The Battle of New Orleans
11. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans?