Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts

August 13, 2023

Ray Stevens: Larry's Country Diner final episode nearing 100,000 unique views...

Hello once again all you fans of Ray Stevens! I was doing some browsing over on YouTube and my eyes caught the unique view totals for the final episode of Larry's Country Diner. The series aired it's final first-run episode in the latter half of 2022 and Ray had the honor of being the program's final guest. The final episode with a guest star was followed by a clip-filled retrospective of the program. The episode was uploaded onto the YouTube channel of Larry's show earlier in March of this year and as of this writing the unique view total is 95,771. I am certain that it will reach 100,000 unique views in time but perhaps with my focusing on that episode in this blog post it'll reach that milestone sooner rather than later this year. 

The episode had aired on television back in August of 2022...but it didn't find it's way onto YouTube until March 2023. In the episode Ray sings a couple of songs that haven't been put on any album yet and he also sang a song from and spoke of his 2021 comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. In the episode Ray sings "The Gambler and The Octopus", "Cup Holders", "Where Are All The 12 Year Old's?", and "Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene". The latter song, if you check the details of the video of the final episode of Larry's show once you visit YouTube, curiously refers to it as "Homecoming Queen" even though Larry's YouTube channel had previously uploaded the performance as a stand-alone under the "Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene" title. The upload of that one performance has received more than 50,000 unique views... whereas the full episode containing that song has over 95,000 unique views to date...

July 4, 2023

Ray Stevens: July 4th Music...

Hello all you fans of Ray Stevens!!! Happy July 4th... but there are several ways of saying it. Happy 4th of July!! Happy Independence Day!! Yes, I know the day is half-over but I'm pretty sure those who come across this July 4th blog entry will be reading it days, weeks, or months later when you find it among online search results. The 4th of July, Memorial Day, and Veterans Day are the three days in a calendar year where the military and patriotic music and patriotic entertainment in general take center stage nationally. So now we're here on Independence Day. The United States is celebrating it's 247th birthday. The country was born on July 4, 1776. 

I was born during the country's bicentennial in 1976. No, I wasn't born on July 4th but I happened to have born a number of months later. I won't say the month in 1976 but it was after July 4th and before December 31st. 

Throughout the career of Ray Stevens you have no doubt heard him sing a lot of patriotic songs from time to time...songs about America and songs about the nation's military. In 1987 Ray was chosen to perform during the half-time show at the Liberty Bowl. The half-time show had a patriotic theme and among the performances was Ray's rendition of "America the Beautiful". This was a full two years before the debut of "There's a Star Spangled Banner" in 1989...written by Ray and collaborator, Buddy Kalb, the song is about an American P.O.W. in Beirut who tries to cling onto hope through his belief in the strength of America's values and the toughness of it's military. The emotional ballad made it's debut as track five on the 1989 album, Beside Myself. Ray and Buddy re-wrote much of the song two years later during the 1991 Gulf War and turned the subject matter of the song from a Beirut P.O.W. into a song about the flag, itself, by describing all of the war zones and battle fields the American Flag has seen over the centuries. This updated rendition of "There's a Star Spangled Banner" first appeared on the Curb Records Greatest Hits album in 1991. The 1991 recording isn't on YouTube...I've searched for it and can't find it. They do have the 1989 recording and here's the audio track...


Fast forward more than 10 years and we find ourselves in the early 2000s. In the latter half of 2001, in response to the 9/11 attacks on America, Ray and Buddy Kalb wrote the novelty song "Osama Yo' Mama". Curb Records issued it as a CD single, at first, with Ray's rendition of "United We Stand" as the B-side. The novelty song eventually was certified a Gold single in the first half of 2002. In the heavy patriotic mood sweeping the country in the latter half of 2001 and for several years afterward a lot of country music entertainers through their music and through personal appearances at fund raisers encouraged people to support the military...especially the soldiers who were being put in harm's way all over the Middle East. The patriotism reached something of a peak around 2004/2005...but in 2004 Ray delivered "Thank You", a patriotic salute to all the Armed Forces. The song was released as a music video, a CD single, and eventually a full length album, also titled Thank You, was released. 


Patriotism and a longing for a return to America's core values...in addition to the underlying feelings taking shape in 2009/2010 surrounding the expansion of the Government bureaucracy into our personal lives set the stage for "We The People" in November 2009. The single spawned a music video...and the music video seen by millions on YouTube, in the blink of an eye, put Ray right in the middle of various culture wars and he found himself being invited to many fundraisers and political events. Ray blended patriotism and political comedy for several years in the early 2010's. Ray issued We The People in 2010 and Spirit of '76 in 2011. The 2010 album, We The People, featured all kinds of songs where patriotism and political commentary took center stage. The 2010 album also featured some previously recorded songs...such as "Let's Roll"...which had debuted on his 2004 Thank You album. Here is the audio track...


After you read this blog entry don't walk away with the feeling that these songs that I'm spotlighting are the only patriotic songs Ray recorded. I'm randomly spotlighting...it isn't meant to be a complete look at the patriotic themed songs from his career. In more recent years we have "Wrapped in the Flag" from the pen of Buddy Kalb. That one was released last year...it features Ray playing the piano and Larry Black narrating a story of a man that loves his country and how, in his early years, he was teased about the patriotism and people laughed it off and remarked how much he's wrapped up too much in the flag. The title has a twist ending...and you'll need to listen closely to the narration...


Today, Ray released the instrumental of "The Star Spangled Banner". It's the keyboard playing that accompanied Larry Black's narration of "Wrapped in the Flag" but in the video clip released this morning we hear just the keyboard playing. As you may know, during the recording process, Ray uses multiple tracks which means that instruments or vocals can easily be added or removed during the production of a recording. Since the keyboard is the main focal point in the clip released this morning it's been turned up in volume for "The Star Spangled Banner" audio track. In "Wrapped in the Flag" the keyboard was appropriately shifted to the background and the volume turned down slightly during Larry Black's narration. 


Closing out this July 4th blog entry is the 1987 performance of "America the Beautiful" by Ray Stevens at the Liberty Bowl half-time show. It was an incredibly cold night and Ray is decked out in a very large fur coat. Bits of snow and the cold temperature are visual highlights. From December 29, 1987 here's Ray Stevens performing at the Liberty Bowl half-time show...

May 24, 2023

Ray Stevens sings "The Gambler and the Octopus"...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! In the last half year or so I had posted several blog entries centering around the next-to-last episode of Larry's Country Diner guest starring Ray Stevens. I posted a blog entry spotlighting the audio tracks of Ray's performances that were uploaded onto YouTube and Spotify, specifically, since I feel those sites are incredibly user friendly and easier to navigate. I later wrote a blog entry that featured my review of that Ray Stevens episode of Larry's Country Diner. The full episode is on YouTube and I've posted it. However, the individual music performances of Ray from that episode hadn't been uploaded in video form onto YouTube...but we're probably about to get all of those performances from the November 2022 episode as separate video uploads. Why do I state that? Well, it's because his performance of "The Gambler and the Octopus" from that November 2022 episode was uploaded onto YouTube yesterday. If my hunch is right we'll probably get individual on-camera performances of the other songs he sang on that episode. The song comes from Ray's recent comedy album, Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore

Although it's been on the market for a couple of years, now, it's still considered his recent studio album because he hasn't released any new studio album since. In the music industry there's a phrase called 'riding an album'. I touched on this in a fairly recent blog entry. It's jargon for the time spent either promoting an album or the songs from an album...and usually a record label or a recording artist will spend at least 1 year or typically no more than 2 years 'riding' an album. 

The album was released in October 2021 and so we're technically 1 year and 7 months since the album's debut. I don't know if Ray will be releasing anything in the near future but perhaps by October when the 2021 comedy album is 2 years old (an eternity in the music industry) there will be a new studio album for our listening pleasure. In the meantime, however, this is the 2022 performance of "The Gambler and the Octopus" on Larry's Country Diner. The screen-cap used on YouTube captures Ray at a moment in the song where he's in the process of grinning prior to shaking his head in disbelief over how confident the gambler seems to be. Some of you that look at the screen-cap may think he's crying but he isn't. 

April 2, 2023

Ray Stevens: Larry's Country Diner October 2022 appearance...My Overview

The photo of Ray Stevens off to the left is from the latter part of 2022 when he was inducted into Nashville's Musicians Hall of Fame. I decided to use this photo because I wanted to promote Ray's inclusion into that particular Hall of Fame which honors musicians/performers in all types of music. Now...about this particular blog entry! It's been almost half a year since this 2022 episode of Larry's Country Diner originally aired...but if you remember I wasn't able to catch the episode the first time around. So, in the meantime, I'd been awaiting the time when the episode aired as a repeat. I counted the repeat airdates from October 2022 and calculated that the episode would repeat sometime in March 2023 and it did...this past Friday. If you caught my previous blog entry you'll know that the repeat wasn't promoted on any of Ray's social media posts and therefore I wasn't aware that Friday (March 31st) was going to be the airdate. I discovered that RFD-TV would repeat the episode a couple more times over the weekend and so I set my DVR to tape Ray's episode airing at 11pm last night (April 1st). I just finished watching it for myself and enjoyed the performances...and then kept thinking about how it was the final first-run episode of the series. Well, I should say the final first-run episode with an in-studio guest. The series officially came to an end following a 2-part look back (part 1 and part 2 aired in back to back weekends in late November). It's always a sad or melancholy feeling whenever a series comes to an end...especially one that's long running. Larry's show began on RFD-TV in 2009 and after 13 years (14 seasons) it wrapped up in 2022. It was one of, if not the only, nationally airing programs in production that regularly spotlighted established, and in most cases, legendary, recording artists. There are other programs on RFD-TV that feature legends, too, but Larry's Country Diner happened to be the only one currently in production (as opposed to repeats of Pop! Goes the Country, Porter Wagoner, and Marty Stuart) and because of the show still being in production it had a contemporary flair to it. Ray was a guest on numerous episodes of Larry's show over the last 14 seasons.

Prior to Ray being introduced in this episode the announcer, Keith Bilbrey, joked about the show's host, Larry Black, auditioning in 1974 to play the part of a real-life streaker. A reference to Ray's single, "The Streak". Larry remarked that he ran down Broadway with no clothes on but nobody took him up on his offer to become a professional streaker. He said that he's loved Ray ever since "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" (1957 release). Larry brings up an old quote attributed to Ray where it stated that recording artists should never discuss religion or politics. Ray, to great laughter, remarked that if he said that then he was way too young to understand much of anything and that it's perfectly okay for recording artists to discuss politics or religion. It perfectly illustrates that opinions change with time. As Larry spoke more of religious aspects Ray discusses being on Barnaby Records at the time of "Everything is Beautiful" in 1970 and one of the executives, Mike Sheppard. The record company's headquarters was located in Los Angeles but it had a Nashville office. 

When speaking of Nashville he comments on the congested traffic and how it hasn't changed in the last 4 decades...and this leads into a conversation about huge trucks that haul around large lawn mowers...and how they're parked wherever a space can be found (causing even more congestion). Ray sings "Where Are All The 12 Year Old's?". He commented that he's been singing that song at the CabaRay but has yet to officially record it. He had previously performed the song on an episode of Huckabee. The song comes from the pen of Nick Sibley who, based on the other songs by him that Ray has recorded, tends to have a nostalgic bent to his lyrics. Nick had written "Safe at Home" and "Dear Andy Griffith" (recorded by Ray in 2000 and 2010, respectively). The song has several twists on phrases and just when you think you know what the song's overall message is about up comes another lyrical twist that gives the song a different meaning. You might come away with the opinion that "Where Are All The 12 Year Old's?" is about a lazy youth culture glued to hi-tech devices with no physical exertion or work ethic...but then you may come away with the opinion that it's a commentary on how something mundane and simple as lawn mowing as a teenager can instill work ethic and the value of earning money...ensuring that future generations of teens will become productive rather than attach themselves to Government handouts. 


Ray follows this performance with "Cup Holders", also from the pen of Nick Sibley. This song is fun to listen to...especially the music arrangement...but don't let the peppy arrangement prevent you from paying attention to the lyrics. I don't think I've heard Ray sing this type of love song in decades. You'd probably have to go back to 1989's "Another Fine Mess" or earlier. 

Shifting music gears Ray brings in the comedy...first in the form of "Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene", from the pen of Buddy Kalb. You could hear all types of laughter at various moments greeting this song...some of the laughter, to my ears at least, tended to be nervous laughter as if some members of the audience weren't too sure if they were allowed to laugh about the topical, controversial subject matter. Ray closed the show with another Buddy Kalb song, "The Gambler and the Octopus", from 2021's Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore

This concludes my overview of the Ray Stevens appearance on Larry's Country Diner. It was a great appearance and one that didn't dwell, too much, on previous recordings to the extent where there wasn't much time to promote current activity. Ray currently performs every Saturday night at his CabaRay showroom in west Nashville. In the episode that aired over the weekend he remarked that he does concerts twice a week but keep in mind the episode airing over the weekend was from October 2022. A second night of concerts for 2023 haven't been added, yet.  

March 31, 2023

Ray Stevens: Larry's Country Diner 2022 appearance...

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! RFD-TV recently (last night) aired the Ray Stevens episode of Larry's Country Diner that originally was broadcast back in October 2022. The episode happened to be the final first-run episode of the series. I was not aware that the episode was going to be re-airing and so when I got home from work Thursday night and began checking various online sites that I visit I learned that Ray's episode had aired yesterday evening. 

I did a program guide search and learned that it'll re-air again a couple more times over the weekend. I set my DVR to tape the April 1st 11pm airing...but then I found out that the full episode had been uploaded on the official Larry's Country Diner YouTube page. So, what I plan on doing, is embedding the video in this blog entry for those of you that want to watch it online and then watch it myself Saturday night when I get home from work. I know the song selections due to their having been uploaded to several music streaming sites...but the interview portions and the overall atmosphere of the show is something you receive when you watch the show in it's entirety. 

Some of the songs Ray sings on this episode are: "Cup Holders", "Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene", and "Where Are All The 12 Year Old's?". As I watch the show I'll be taking some notes and then write out my official review/overview of the episode in a future blog entry. In the meantime here's the last first-run episode of Larry's Country Diner...with Ray Stevens as the special guest...

February 5, 2023

Ray Stevens: Musicians Hall of Fame Video

Hello fans of Ray Stevens and welcome to February! Well, we're 5 days into the new month but this is my first blog entry of February. We start the month off with a video clip from this past November. As many of you know from reading this fan created blog Ray Stevens was enshrined into the Musicians Hall of Fame in November of 2022. There were several photographs that emerged from the gala, well, the post-ceremony, but until the other day there wasn't anything from the actual presentation. A video clip was played during Ray's induction into the Musicians Hall of Fame and it's narrated by Buddy Kalb. If you're a casual fan of Ray Stevens then a lot of the information and the photos contained in the video clip will be brand new to you. It's a fun video clip featuring Ray at all time periods in his career but with a slight emphasis on the behind the scenes work (record production; music arranging; music publishing; songwriting; playing on sessions). There are numerous photos of Ray inside recording studios up and down Music Row throughout the 1960s. You'll see him in group photos with other session musicians and there are several photos of Ray with some of his closest friends (Chet Atkins and Ralph Emery spring to mind). Ray had previously posted some of the photos that show up in the video clip and there are some that appear in his 2014 memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville. So, as I said, if you're a casual fan then a lot of the information Buddy Kalb mentions and most of the photos are going to be brand new to you. Buddy remarks how versatile Ray's song catalog truly is. Ray has recorded pop, country, gospel, and comedy throughout his career. 

The main photo in the YouTube thumbnail is a picture of Ray when he was a kid. In his youth he was raised in several locales in Georgia: Clarkdale (where he was born); Albany (where the family moved to when he was a teen); and then into the outskirts of Atlanta. You're going to love the video clip...

December 31, 2022

Ray Stevens and the upcoming New Year...2023

Hello fans of Ray Stevens!! This is my annual New Year's Eve post on this fan created blog and we're just hours away from reaching 2023. This past year was filled with all kinds of adjustments as the now-archaic pandemic restrictions/regulations were slowly being lifted and life was slowly getting back to normal. These events had been set in motion in the latter half of 2021. This is why, in my point of view, the pandemic life is rather archaic and by now should have been put in everyone's rear view mirror in a car going 65 mph. Ray kicked off the 2022 concert season at the CabaRay showroom in the spring and wrapped up the final concert of the season just last night. As far as recorded music output goes it was a down year, well, almost. Although, as far as we know, the songs haven't been officially recorded Ray nevertheless premiered several new songs in his guest appearance a couple months ago on the television show, Larry's Country Diner. Ray performed "Cup Holders" and "When Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene" in addition to performing "The Gambler and the Octopus" and "Where Are All the 12 Year Old's?". The latter song had actually saw it's public performance debut in 2021 when Ray guest starred on an episode of Huckabee. On that same episode he also performed "Disorder Down on the Border". I hadn't been able to attend any concerts at his CabaRay and so I don't know if he's performed "Cup Holders", "Where Are All the 12 Year Old's?", or "When Bubba Changed His Name to Charlene" for his CabaRay audiences or not. 

Ray has already revealed that the 2023 concert season at the CabaRay will begin sometime in March. Let's not forget that on January 24, 2023 he'll have a birthday! The human embodiment of the energizer bunny, Ray Stevens his own self, will reach 84. In 2022 Ray Stevens was elected to the Musicians Hall of Fame and he was a co-recipient (with Brenda Lee) of the Cecil Scaife Visionary Award.  

It's difficult to predict whether or not he'll have out any new albums in 2023. In 2021 he issued, through Curb Records, 5 albums: Great Country Ballads, Melancholy Fescue, Slow Dance, Nouveau Retro, and Ain't Nothin' Funny Anymore. In bygone years 5 separate studio albums issued in one calendar year meant the material could be worked for a number of years. However, in this digital online internet age we live in, where the audio tracks from an album can get thousands of plays in a matter of hours, no longer is it advantageous in my opinion for any recording artist to ride a couple of albums for 3 to 4 years. Oh, it can be done...but the way music is now consumed the appetite is much too large and audiences want music almost instantaneously...they don't want to wait for the traditional process to play out of artist's releasing one single, then another, and then the full album and then another single or two after an album's released. Now, having said that it's difficult to predict if any new albums from Ray will arrive in 2023, with Ray having performed several songs that are new to us in this current calendar year it's highly possible that a new Ray Stevens album or two will emerge in 2023. 

What are a few of the upcoming album anniversaries for 2023? Well, his second studio album released in 1963, titled This is Ray Stevens, reaches 60 in 2023. Hitting 50 in 2023 is the overlooked Losin' Streak album as well as the much more publicized Nashville album. In a previous blog entry I mentioned his 1983 Me album hitting 40 in 2023. I'll be highlighting some of those albums and some of the songs in addition to highlighting odd-year anniversaries such as a look into 1994, just as an example. I leave you with Ray Stevens performing "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve?" from his CabaRay Nashville television series. Unless there's breaking news I'll communicate with all of you Ray Stevens fans next year!! 

December 26, 2022

Ray Stevens: The 2022 CabaRay season nearing it's end...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! As we're nearing calendar transition, going from 2022 to 2023 this coming weekend, it feels now's the right time to remind you all that the last two concerts of the 2022 season at the CabaRay showroom will take place this coming Thursday and Friday. The dates, specifically, are December 29th and December 30th. There will not be a New Year's Eve concert this year. This is Ray's fourth concert season at his showroom. Ray began performing concerts at the showroom in 2018. If it weren't for the pandemic Ray could've been coming off his 5th full season of concerts but CabaRay performances in both the 2020 and half-way through the 2021 seasons were almost non-existent. So, it is what it is, Ray is instead coming off 3 full seasons (2018, 2019, 2022) of CabaRay concerts this week. In September 2021 Ray re-opened the CabaRay.. normally, the concert season would've kicked off in March...but in 2021 the CabaRay re-opened in the fall and he performed concerts weekly over the next 4 months. So, technically, Ray's performed at his showroom 3 full seasons (2018, 2019, 2022) and 4 months in all of 2021. Ray usually keeps the Christmas decorations up until the final concert of the season but I don't think there will be Christmas songs performed during the final two concerts of the year, however. Those wanting to attend the final two concerts of the season at the CabaRay showroom can purchase your tickets here. I realize that if you live multiple states away chances are you're probably going to want to purchase tickets in person rather than have them arrive in the mail. They offer a Will Call service...you'll purchase tickets on their webpage and they'll hold them for you. When you arrive at the CabaRay have the proper paperwork/confirmation number handy and you'll be given the tickets you purchased. I would suggest you call the showroom, though, and get the specifics of the Will Call service. I used that service when I attended a concert there in 2018. You can purchase tickets or find their phone number when you click this LINK

December 12, 2022

Ray Stevens: Cecil Scaife Visionary Award Co-Recipient...

Well, hello all of you fans of Ray Stevens!! I've been busy off-line but I've been keeping up to date with all things Ray Stevens. On the heels of Ray's most recent honor, election to the
Musicians Hall of Fame, his CabaRay showroom became the focal point for the 2022 Cecil Scaife Visionary Award event. The ceremony took place last Sunday (December 4th 2022) and, in case you weren't aware, the ceremony pulled off a tremendous surprise revolving around the hosts of the event: Ray Stevens and Brenda Lee. There have been a couple of news articles published in the days following the December 4th event and it was reported that the Cecil Scaife Visionary Award was presented, in surprise fashion, to both Ray Stevens and Brenda Lee! The event is a fundraising gala and it benefits the arts. The highlight of the event is, of course, the presentation of the Visionary Award. It's named after Cecil Scaife and it's tied in to a music scholarship, the Cecil Scaife Endowment, at the Mike Curb College of Music and Entertainment at Belmont University. The co-host of the event happened to be Cecil Scaife's daughter, LaRawn Scaife Rhea. In the various reports that surfaced online it was revealed that Brenda came out to the center stage of the CabaRay to make a presentation to Ray Stevens and award him with the 2022 Cecil Scaife Visionary Award. It was reported that she was surprised when Ray was already on stage...and also holding an award. The two were surprised to learn that they were both on stage to present the Visionary Award...and neither one knew the other would be a recipient! A truly surprising moment for both of them...named co-recipients of the 2022 Cecil Scaife Visionary Award

The award is given to those whose life and work have made it possible for future generations to realize careers in the music industry. The two legends come from Georgia and they've worked together many times over the decades. Cecil Scaife happened to be a behind-the-scenes figure in the music industry. A record executive, music promoter, and some considered him a recording studio pioneer. In his online bio one of the things he is credited for is running one of the first multi-track recording studios in Nashville. I know that Ray utilized multi-tracking in his recordings...as early as the late 1960s...but Ray didn't officially own and operate out of his own recording studio until 1973. Another factoid about Cecil Scaife is that he began a Music Business course at Belmont University in 1971. He began his career as a record promoter for Sun Records in Memphis. 

There are a lot of photos from the Cecil Scaife gala...if you search Ray's social media pages you'll find a lot of photos. There's video of Ray, Brenda Lee, and most of the performers closing out the event singing a rendition of Brenda Lee's Christmas classic, "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree". 

December 8, 2022

Ray Stevens: Year End Spotify Stats

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! The year-end Spotify statistics were revealed several days ago. The legendary Ray Stevens enjoyed another massive year on Spotify. The stats show that Ray received 6.1 million streams on the platform with 1 million listeners for the year. Spotify also provides hour data...according to their stats the music of Ray Stevens accounted for 321.8K hours. I have no idea how they come up with that type of statistic but it's posted on Ray's year-end numbers for the Spotify site and therefore I'm sharing the stats here in this blog entry. Also, the music of Ray Stevens was accessed on Spotify by people in 175 countries. The year-end numbers are officially billed as Spotify Wrapped and are revealed in early December. Some more stats for Ray is the amount of times people have saved his songs. His songs have been saved by Spotify listeners more than 270,000 times. The top track of Ray's on Spotify is "Mississippi Squirrel Revival". When the numbers were revealed for 2022 the track was revealed to have been played 1,190,468 times. Some of the lesser reported stats are less about streaming and more about artist ranking. For example: 1,565 people voted Ray as their Number One Spotify Artist. 7,393 people placed Ray among their Top-5 Spotify Artists. 14,558 people had Ray among their Top-10 Spotify Artists. Spotify listeners added Ray's songs to 110,230 playlists in 2022. You can visit Ray's Spotify page by clicking HERE. Once there you'll find many, many songs...including some fairly recent songs Ray performed on the television show, Larry's Country Diner. Take a listen to all kinds of Ray Stevens songs on Spotify. You'll be thoroughly entertained. 

December 3, 2022

Ray Stevens: Musicians Hall of Fame photos...

Hello out there all you fans of Ray Stevens!! Several days ago Ray was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame. There was a shortage of photos from the event but this past Thursday a lot of photos from Ray's portion of the event were uploaded to his social media pages. I'm going to post a couple of the photos in this blog entry. They'll be part of a collage. The Musicians Hall of Fame honors music and those who play music...and it's not an organization that pushes one style of music. Ray Stevens has long been a recording artist that has performed pop music, country music, comedy music, gospel music, middle-of-the-road music, and he has a love for classic rhythm and blues which could be heard in many of his earlier recordings. Some of his music influences were Ray Charles, The Coasters, The Drifters, and numerous stand-up comedians and radio comedians. 

Ray Stevens; 2020

In the late 1990's The Nashville Network aired a television special on Ray called The Life and Times of Ray Stevens. The hour long television special was part of a recurring series of biographical programs on country music recording artists. When the special originally aired, in 1999, it was the longest look into the personal side of Ray Stevens to ever appear. If you're new to Ray's music/career then it's best for you to know that Ray isn't one of these artists that bares his soul and gets too detailed about his personal life in his interviews. The television special opened up a lot of what had been held back from public consumption including his feelings on music and his experiences as a piano player in guitar town (as Nashville is commonly referred to). The TV special enabled fans to hear Ray speak about his music influences, too, in a more relaxed format. 

The next opportunity for the public to learn more about Ray's off-stage goings on and his thoughts on an assortment of topics wouldn't arrive until 15 years later (2014) when he released his memoir, Ray Stevens' Nashville. The 1999 TV special and the 2014 memoir are vital for any Ray Stevens fan. Now, I'm sure some of you haven't seen the 1999 Life and Times special, but if you visit his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville you'll see Ray's career on full display through the presence of numerous publisher awards, Gold and Platinum album and VHS plaques for millions of sales; numerous certifications, awards, and photographs line the walls and fill various trophy cases. 


You'll see his 9 Music City News Comedian of the Year trophies; A Golden Pick award from Country Weekly magazine when their readers voted him Favorite Comedian; You'll see a replica Star from the Music City Walk of Fame; His Country Music Hall of Fame medallion is on display and I'm sure the latest Musicians Hall of Fame medallion will also be on display. You'll see him perform and you'll see the Piano Bar and the gift shop. Ray's career is on display under one roof...the CabaRay showroom. It's Christmas season at the CabaRay and all the information can be found HERE. Ray's concerts are held on Thursday and Saturday.

In the collage above, in panel one, we have Ray holding the trophy showing him as an inductee of the Musicians Hall of Fame in 2022 and wearing the medallion presented to him at the Musicians Hall of Fame last month. In panel two it's Ray and longtime friend/collaborator Buddy Kalb. In panel three we have Ray, hands gripped, looking debonair with the medallion peeking out from his jacket.  

December 1, 2022

Ray Stevens: Upcoming December CabaRay concerts...

Hello all you Ray Stevens fans!! December promises to be a busy month at the CabaRay showroom. The Christmas concerts got underway last month but since we're officially in December that means the Christmas concerts are going to have even more of an impact. Ray will be performing 8 concerts this month. There will be a Thursday and Saturday concert during the next 3 weeks beginning tonight. The Christmas concert dates are December 1st, 3rd, 8th, 10th, 15th, and 17th. There will be a week off (no CabaRay concerts scheduled for December 22nd or 24th) and then Ray will return on December 29th and December 30th. You can get tickets for any of the concerts by clicking HERE


On December 4th the Cecil Scaife Visionary Awards will be presented at the CabaRay showroom. The event is also using the marketing line of Nashville Celebrates. The official hosts are Ray Stevens and Brenda Lee. There will be a line-up of performers at the charity event. There's a promotional video on YouTube and tickets for the dinner and concert are SOLD OUT...but tickets are still available for the concert itself. So, if you want to attend the ceremony, you can order tickets for the concert only. The dinner tickets, as mentioned, are sold out. The voice over on the promo video is where I learned that the dinner and concert tickets were sold out yet concert-only tickets are still available. This video is for the December 4th charity event/concert and because it's a video for a one-time event chances are this video will eventually get removed from YouTube once the event concludes on December 4th...and for those of you reading this well after December 4th and you see a blank video box below then you'll know the reason why. 


There is no concert scheduled for December 31st New Year's Eve which falls on a Saturday this year. I have a feeling as to why there isn't going to be a New Year's Eve concert this year but I'll hold off publicly stating my thought until we learn more.   

November 27, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-1, S-3

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Season Three of Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville got underway on YouTube this past Friday. This episode marked the beginning of the program's syndication run with local PBS stations. The program had aired for two seasons (26 episodes) on RFD-TV beginning in November 2015 and running through December 2016. The program then moved to local PBS syndication starting in January 2017. A total of 52 episodes were produced for the PBS run. There are two ways of looking at the seasons. There is the cable TV, niche TV, and online streaming definition of a season (13 first run episodes) and there is the network TV definition of a season (26 first run episodes). So, depending on how you market it, the show is described as having 4 seasons of 13 first run episodes each or 2 seasons of 52 first run episodes in it's initial syndicated run on local PBS stations. Regardless of how you market/promote the number of seasons the fact is, in total, there were 78 episodes produced of Ray's television program. Since I'm following the 13 episode per season definition this is Episode 1 of Season 3.

Ray opens the show singing "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon". He tells the history of the song once he concludes the performance. Although not mentioned on the YouTube program description he performs a second song, 1961's "Jeremiah Peabody's Green and Purple Pills", as a tie-in to 1960's "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon". Ray performs both songs in their entirety with as much gusto and energy that both songs require. The dog howls and other vocal sound effects in both recordings brought wild bursts of laughter and applause from the audience. 

He introduces Harold Bradley and Mandy Barnett. Ray mentions that both he and Harold have the same first and middle names: Harold Ray. Harold discusses his entry into the music business and how his first recording sessions took place in Chicago on a Pee Wee King recording in the late 1940s. He explains that, in those years, there wasn't much of an opportunity to make records in Nashville and that his career began prior to Nashville becoming known as Music City, USA. Harold's first session in Nashville happened in 1950. Ray asks how Harold and Mandy joined forces... 

The story is tied to Owen Bradley (Harold's brother) and a stage show called Always...Patsy Cline. The musical began in 1994 at the Ryman Auditorium. Mandy portrayed and sang like the late Patsy Cline so convincingly that, from that point forward, Mandy's name for some people became synonymous with Patsy Cline...some say the two have become inextricably linked. Mandy, according to most sources, has portrayed Patsy Cline in more than 500 performances dating back to 1994. She was one of the longest running frequent guest performers at the Grand Ole Opry...appearing hundreds of times in a nearly 30 year period. She was officially inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in November 2021...after having made her first guest appearance there 27 years earlier in 1994. It'll probably always remain a mystery as to why it took the Opry nearly 30 years to officially make her a member.


Mandy and Harold perform "Crazy" and "I'm Confessin'". Ray closes the show with "Harry the Hairy Ape". The episode has a decidedly classic country overtone...specifically a vintage 1960's flavor. This, of course, had a lot to do with the special guests being Harold Bradley and Mandy Barnett, a recurring subject matter of Patsy Cline, and the fact that Ray performed songs from the 1960's, too.  

November 24, 2022

Ray Stevens: Newest Musicians Hall of Fame Member...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! Tuesday was the big night...Ray Stevens became one of the newest members of the Musicians Hall of Fame. This is a Hall of Fame that recognizes musicians regardless of music format. Among the Class of 2022, in addition to Ray, were Vince Gill, Marty Stuart and his band The Fabulous Superlatives, and Don McLean plus several others. Music Row magazine and The Tennessean newspaper are just two online sites that provided an overview of Tuesday night's event. There were several photos that made the internet as well. I come across a couple of Ray. It was described that the Hall presented an extensive video documentary/retrospective of Ray's 60 plus years as a recording artist prior to the presentation of the medallion. As far as music goes it was reported that Ray sang "Everything is Beautiful" and "The Streak". There's a photo of Ray wearing his medallion but he's standing beside the person who arranged for the photo to be taken and I don't want to crop the other person out or post the photo without permission since Ray himself hasn't posted it to his social media yet...but it's on the Instagram page of Tim Hibbs. His screen name over there is thibbs111 for those interested in seeing a photo of Ray and his Musicians Hall of Fame medallion. I have no idea if the event was recorded for playback at a later date or not. Since we weren't able to see the event I don't have much details or anything specific that I can add other than what was reported by The Tennessean and a few other online outlets. 

November 22, 2022

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-13, S-2

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! We've reached episode 13 of Season 2 of the CabaRay Nashville television series. This is the final episode of Season 2. If you're a detailed fan of Ray's as I am then you'll know that the first 26 episodes of the television series originally aired on RFD-TV (Seasons One and Two). The series then moved to first-run local syndication on PBS stations across the country beginning with Season Three. The special guest on this episode happens to be Reed Robertson of the Duck Dynasty family. That series was a massive hit on the Arts and Entertainment channel for four years (2013-2017). There were 131 episodes produced in that time span. Since it was considered a niche program and because it was on cable it adhered to the cable tradition of at least 13 episodes a season but in some seasons as little as 9 episodes aired. This means that, in cable TV terminology, the series ran 11 production seasons but four television seasons (2013-2014, 2014-2015, 2015-2016, and 2016-2017). Reed's graduation ceremony from high school was shown on an episode of Duck Dynasty. He was born in 1995...the year that I, your blogger, graduated high school!! 

Ray opened the show singing "Dear Andy Griffith" from the pen of Nick Sibley. The nostalgic song originally appeared on Ray's 2010 album, We The People. It's nostalgic but it's also a social commentary on how things have become...and how the average level headed person simply yearn for simpler times. 

Ray introduces Reed Robertson who speaks of his athletic past and how, in high school, he played five sports. He gives Ray a duck call as a gift and speaks of how his parent's love music. He mentions that his mother sang opera in the morning hours at their house while his dad preferred country music...specifically Johnny Cash. Since this episode was taped a number of years ago, and if you follow the Robertson's, you'll notice how different Reed looks in this appearance compared to how he looks now. At the time of this episode he still had the lengthy hair but in most recent appearances he's had a much shorter hair style and a stubbly beard. 


Reed sings "Hallelujah" and this is followed by a comic sketch for the fictional Duck-a-Phone. It's a parody of the Zamfir pan flute television commercials that used to air on TV in the early 1990s. In Ray's sketch he plays a duck hunter who uses an instrument made up of a row of duck calls called a Duck-a-Phone. The hunter demonstrates his prowess by humming numerous melodies through the duck calls...each with a different pitch.

Reed Robertson's second performance is "I'll Be the One" and this is followed by an appearance by Ray's daughter, Suzi. She sings the up-tempo "Wishbone" as Ray plays the piano. It's the first time that the show was closed by someone other than Ray in performance...Suzi performed the final song of the episode. Season Three's first episode will be uploaded onto YouTube this coming Friday. 

November 21, 2022

Ray Stevens: 1 Day Until Musicians Hall of Fame Induction...

Hello once again and welcome to Part Two...now we're only 1 day away until Ray Stevens is inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame. If you read my Part One blog entry you may have come away with the impression that I was very broad (not detailed) in my overview of Ray's career time-line from 1955 through 1979. I have a detailed career time-line of Ray that runs along the side of the blog. It begins in 1955 and every so often I'll add an image to the time-line which represents a specific year. When Ray releases a new album or single I'll add the publicity image to the time-line. Anyway, I didn't want to be too detailed in my Part One blog since that's the function of the pictorial time-line. Toward the end of the last blog entry I brought up Ray's push into the country music mainstream as the mid 1970's rolled around. His friendship with Chet Atkins lasted decades. The two were often spotted together at music industry functions and gala's...and unless you're well detailed in the career/life of Ray Stevens then you may not know that the two were business partners in a string of real estate properties all over Nashville. In music industry publications some of the writers half-jokingly nicknamed Ray the Landlord of Music Row. Nashville is an album Ray released on Barnaby Records in 1973. I consider it his first major step into the country music format. The album's overall feel is in line with what Nashville was promoting as country music at the time. Ray was the producer and arranger on the album as he had been on his last several studio albums. "Nashville" was the main single release and it's become a mainstay in his concerts...but it had gone under the radar for several decades before Ray brought it back to the forefront of his career several years ago. It was a country music hit...it didn't appear on the pop chart. Ray was in the process of recording studio ownership around this time. He opened up a studio called The Ray Stevens Sound Laboratory. 

Some of his pop music releases crossed over to the country audience and I feel the friendship he had with Ralph Emery was a factor. Ralph was a very influential country music disc jockey and country music television host...and typically if a song was heard on Ralph's broadcasts chances were other disc jockeys around the country picked up on it. 

"Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", as mentioned in Part One, was the first single of Ray's to appear on a country music chart. The single charted pop in America and in Canada as well as country in America and Canada. The Canadian RPM publication had Ray's single ranked higher on their pop and country chart's indicating that it either had more sales or more airplay in Canada than here in the United States. If you search weekly chart publications you'll find all kinds of interesting tidbits revolving around single and album releases in Ray's career. Since his career bounced all over the music spectrum you'll find that an album or single might do well in one format but not even appear in another...but then, by the next release, the format that didn't embrace the previous single may embrace the following single and vice versa. Ray's next country appearance came with "Have a Little Talk With Myself"...and though it's appearance on the weekly country chart was brief the fact that his singles were breaking into country music as early as 1969 suggested his wide appeal. 

1970's "Everything is Beautiful" was a multi-week number one pop hit, a multi-week Adult-Contemporary number one, and it reached the music charts internationally...and it, too, crossed over to the country chart and reached the Top-40 in that format. A series of gospel singles in 1971 hit pop and adult-contemporary...with one, "Turn Your Radio On", pulling a triple-prize by charting pop, adult-contemporary, and country. In the country market the single hit the Top-20. Two preceding singles "All My Trials" and "A Mama and a Papa" both reached the Top-10 on the Adult-Contemporary charts both here in the United States and in Canada. His rock and roll arrangement of "Love Lifted Me" was also a hit...but in Bangkok of all places. Billboard magazine's Hits of the World shows the single listed on Bangkok's music chart for multiple weeks. Ray's international publicity took him all over the globe in the early to mid 1970s. As you see here it's a March 1971 issue of a Sydney, Australia tourist guide with Ray Stevens on the cover. Later on Ray wrote the song, "Nashville", a song I mentioned earlier, during one of his lengthy overseas tours. Ray is quoted as saying he wrote the song because he was homesick for Nashville. Ray plays the piano, keyboard, and synthesizer and is credited as one of the musicians in almost all of his albums. He is also credited with being the record producer and music arranger. His first producer credit, as far as his own recordings are concerned, come along in 1968. Specifically it was a co-producer credit with Fred Foster on the Even Stevens album. That is the album that introduced a general public that never bothered to play the B-side of singles a chance to hear a serious side of Ray Stevens. Serious songs often appeared as the B-side of his novelty songs throughout his years at Mercury and during the earliest years of his recording career on Monument (which began in 1965) but Even Stevens was an entire album of non-comedy and it's main single was the pop hit, "Mr. Businessman". Fred Foster, Ray Stevens, and Jim Malloy were the record producers on the Gitarzan comedy album. Ray's final studio album for Monument, Have a Little Talk With Myself, was produced by Ray with co-production by Jim Malloy. Ray's first studio album where he was the sole record producer happened to be Everything is Beautiful, released in the summer of 1970. The Mercury singles and two studio albums (1961-1965) were produced by Shelby Singleton...with some single releases featuring co-production by Jerry Kennedy. 

From 1970 onward Ray has been the main producer of all of his albums and the music arranger on all of his recordings...with the exception of two back to back albums in 1982 and 1983. Don't Laugh Now, from 1982 on RCA Records, featured co-production work from Bob Montgomery. Me, from 1983 on Mercury Records, featured co-production work from Jerry Kennedy. The 1982 album was Ray's third for RCA. A few years earlier, in 1980, Ray was the recipient of two career recognition awards. The Georgia Music Hall of Fame as well as the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Ray's exquisite Don't Laugh Now is so good...there's a mix of all kinds of styles on the album. The opening track is his catchy take on "Such a Night". The album features a novelty song in "Where The Sun Don't Shine" and a series of love ballads including the hit single, "Written Down in My Heart". 


Ray's deep dive into country music comedy began in the latter half of 1984 when he joined MCA Records. It was on this record label where Ray's albums took center stage as each of his releases on the label entered the Country Albums chart...with two of the albums reaching Top-10 status and almost all of them having long chart runs. It is also on MCA Records that the sales of his albums were so large that several of them eventually achieved Gold and Platinum certification. As unbelievable as it may sound Ray's 1981, 1982, and 1983 studio albums didn't appear on the weekly album charts. So, when 1984's He Thinks He's Ray Stevens debuted on Billboard's Country Albums chart it marked his first appearance on the chart with a studio album since Shriner's Convention in 1980. A 1983 Greatest Hits album, on RCA, became a hit. 

Ray's career branched out into different avenues in the 1990s. The decade of the 1980s was dominated, mostly, with his comedy albums for MCA and his consecutive wins as Comedian of the Year by the readers of Music City News magazine and viewers of The Nashville Network. In the 1990s he signed with Curb Records and he revealed his plans for building a theater in Branson, Missouri. The theater opened to the public in the summer of 1991. This led Ray into the realm of VHS tape. He produced and starred in a collection of music videos and sold them on VHS under the title Comedy Video Classics in 1992. VHS reporters for the music industry cited Ray's VHS as being revolutionary. Television commercials played on hundreds of television stations and at all hours of the day and night. It became a multi-million seller through direct marketing and when it was released to retail stores in 1993 it repeated the same success. Billboard named the VHS it's Video of the Year in 1993. Ray Stevens Live!, part of a concert at his former theater in Branson, Missouri, was sold on VHS and was certified Double-Platinum through direct marketing. In audio that decade Ray recorded three studio albums for Curb Records. He performed at his Branson theater for three seasons (1991, 1992, and 1993). Here's video of Ray at the piano performing "Yakety Sax/Yakety Axe" along side Chet Atkins and Boots Randolph. It's from an episode of Nashville Now...you'll see the show's host, Ralph Emery, at the beginning of the video.


Ray returned to MCA Records late in 1996 and recorded two albums for them and released more comedy music videos. He had marked his return to MCA with the retail release of his VHS tape, Get Serious!, which was sold through direct marketing in 1995. It was certified Double-Platinum. 

When Ray goes into the Musicians Hall of Fame tomorrow we'll all be excited but we also know that Ray's career will continue to move along. He'll continue performing concerts at his CabaRay showroom in West Nashville and his songs will continue to be discovered by thousands of people who search the internet for 'comedy songs', 'comedy music', 'funny songs', etc. I deliberately cut off my overview of Ray's career in the mid 1990s because I feel I've written a detailed overview without it turning into an entire career retrospective. I'm hoping the Musicians Hall of Fame will give Ray's career an in-depth going over tomorrow...but even if they don't it's still going to be exciting to know that Ray's being recognized for his career by such a prestigious organization.   

November 20, 2022

Ray Stevens: 2 Days until Musicians Hall of Fame Induction...

Hello once again!! I was going to write a blog entry tomorrow about Ray Stevens being inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame this coming Tuesday (November 22) but I decided to go ahead and write my celebration blog entry today. Why? Well, I can't help myself...I can't wait until tomorrow evening or late in the night tomorrow...I want to mark the celebration now. This will be Part One, however. I'll write Part Two later tonight or sometime early tomorrow morning. 

A general public most likely know of Ray Stevens by way of any number of comedy recordings. Ray himself likes to say that if anybody knows who he is then more than likely they know of him for some kind of comedy song or some sort of comedy video...now, of course, comedy isn't all there is to Ray Stevens. Throughout his now 65 year recording career (dating back to 1957) Ray has recorded just about every type and style of popular music imaginable. He began singing the style of music that was most dominant...the teenage love ballad. His roots are in Georgia. He was born Harold Ray Ragsdale in Clarkdale, Georgia and he resided in Georgia until a permanent move, five years into his recording career, to Nashville, Tennessee in 1962. Late in his high school years he and his family (his parents and a brother) packed up and moved to the Atlanta area. He and his brother had to switch schools, too. Ray had been attending Albany High School but the move from Clarkdale to the Atlanta suburbs meant he was going to graduate from Druid Hills High School. It was in high school that Ray formed a band called The Barons. Prior to the move to Atlanta, as you can see from the photo, Ray had made a name for himself as co-host of a local radio sock hop. This radio series, co-hosted by Mary Dale Vansant, aired on WGPC radio beginning in 1955. It was a Saturday radio program called The Record Hop. As you may have known or may have guessed by now the style of music that a young Ray Stevens (known as Ray Ragsdale) was originally exposed to was country, gospel, and all kinds of rhythm and blues. In addition he was also exposed to radio comedy/stand-up comedy, rock and roll, and with this love of music and comedy he'd say, decades later, was a big reason he loved The Coasters so much. Ray had come of age right when rock and roll was brand new...turning 18 in January 1957. He was a high school graduate the same year...a member of the Druid Hills Class of '57. Yes...it was the very same year he signed his first professional recording contract. It was with Prep Records, a subsidiary of Capitol Records. As far as the music business/music industry is concerned the first two important figures in the career of a young Ray Stevens were Bill Lowery and Ken Nelson. 

Ray had been using his birthname up until his meeting with Ken Nelson. Ray been known as Ray Ragsdale, locally, in the Albany and Atlanta area but it was through the suggestion of Ken Nelson that Ray should come up with a stage name. Harold Ragsdale perhaps sounded too mature of a name for a teenager and the last name, Ragsdale, didn't seem like it could be marketable. Ray decided to use the last name of his mother, Stephens, for his stage name. In interviews Ray remarked that Ken loved the name, 'Ray Stephens', but he says Ken suggested that the last name be spelled 'Stevens'. Prep Records released "Silver Bracelet" under the name of Ray Stevens in 1957...and it was reportedly a local hit in the Atlanta area. Ken released a few singles on Ray on the Capitol label in 1958 that attracted regional attention. Bill Lowery guided Ray through the next phase of his career...signing him to his own label, NRC. Ray, Jerry Reed, Joe South, Tommy Roe, and Billy Joe Royal were all under the guidance of Bill Lowery...most of them, if not all, shown up on The Georgia Jubilee music program. Bill was an Atlanta-based disc jockey who became a very successful music publisher and was completely independent from New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Nashville. One wonders if Ray got his desires of being a publisher from seeing the financial successes of Bill Lowery's music publishing company and how important publishing rights are to a recording? Perhaps...but Ray didn't begin to delve into the music publishing side of the music industry until the late 1960s.


Ray happens to be, in my opinion, a music prodigy. He can play the piano and other keyboard instruments but he can also read and write music for other instruments...and this talent had him in demand for all kinds of recording sessions once he got into Nashville in the early 1960s. In the meantime, though, he professionally parted ways with Bill Lowery and began a professional relationship with Shelby Singleton at Mercury Records in 1961. It was at Mercury where Ray began a lengthy run as a session musician and music arranger...not only on his own recordings but for dozens of other recordings by other recording artists. 

Ray had released a series of love ballads and rhythm and blues style songs in the late 1950s time period. He had also recorded some novlety songs... "Rang Dang Ding Dong" appeared on one side of his debut single in 1957 on Prep, "Silver Bracelet". In 1960, while at NRC, he recorded "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" which displayed not only his love for The Coasters style of music but it was gaining some exposure outside of the Atlanta, Georgia market. Ironically, the reporting of the novelty song's local success made it's way to the owners of the Sgt. Preston character...their lawyers sent NRC a letter and threatened a lawsuit if the song wasn't pulled off the market. Ray has always said that the near hit of that song inspired him to come up with another comedy recording and so, in 1961, he put out a novelty song on Mercury Records. The song is funny but what caused the most attention was it's title: "Jeremiah Peabody's Polyunsaturated Quick Dissolving Fast Acting Pleasant Tasting Green and Purple Pills". This novelty song became Ray's first hit single...reaching the national Hot 100 chart in Billboard magazine. A year earlier "Sgt. Preston of the Yukon" peaked on Billboard's Bubbling Under the Hot 100...and had it not been pulled off the market it could've become Ray's first hit. It was on Mercury Records, in 1962, that Ray had his biggest hit single to date...the comical "Ahab the Arab". It crossed over to the Rhythm and Blues chart as well. 

Ray's musician side bigger emphasis during his Mercury (1961-1963) and, specifically, his Monument (1963-1970) years. Fred Foster became the next important figure in Ray's music career in 1963. Fred hired Ray to work in the Artist and Repertoire department, arrange the music for recording sessions, lead the sessions, and play on the sessions. So it is definitely no surprise that it was during the first half of the Monument era where Ray concentrated heavily on music arranging and session work. Mercury Records, however, continued to control his recordings and they released a series of love ballads and novelty songs on him while he was producing and arranging the songs of an assortment of recording artists. Ray either played on the sessions or did the music arranging on several Monument Records releases. He was also getting into the publishing business, too. Lowery Music had been the publishing company that controlled the bulk of Ray's recordings but this changed not too long after Ray joined Monument Records. Ray began his own Ahab Music Company and entered the music publishing business. Now, of course, nearly all of the titles published by his own company were his own recordings...or, later, songs written by writers who worked for his publishing company. While at Mercury Records and at Monument Records he worked with Dolly Parton, Patti Page, Brenda Lee, Dusty Springfield, and Brook Benton. 

Monument began releasing singles on Ray in the latter half of 1965...and though all of the single releases were top quality and excellent their first big hit didn't arrive until 1968's "Mr. Businessman". The single that preceded it, "Unwind", reached the pop Hot 100. From 1968 to around 1984 Ray Stevens continued to balance his recordings between pop, country, and comedy...even recording a gospel album in 1972. He became associated with Andy Williams in 1969. Ray's recording of "Gitarzan" became a million selling hit not only in America but it became a hit in several other countries which opened his career up, a little bit, internationally. He slowed down on participating in recording sessions in 1970 because, in his own words, his career become so successful that he didn't have the time to play on the recordings of other singers as the demands from his own career had skyrocketed tremendously since his move to Nashville in 1962. Andy Williams brought Ray to Barnaby Records in 1970. It was also in 1970 that he hosted a summer show for Andy Williams and that show's theme song, "Everything is Beautiful", went on to win Ray a Grammy in 1971 in the category of Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. A recording of the song by gospel singer, Jake Hess, won a Grammy in a gospel category in 1971. While 1969's "Gitarzan" brought Ray some international recognition it was "Everything is Beautiful" that brought him the widest international exposure to date...selling millions of copies...but the international reach would reach a fever pitch in 1974 with the release of the multi-million selling novelty, "The Streak". 


Ray's songs were bouncing from pop to country to adult-contemporary during the first five years of the '70s. His first appearance on the country music chart had arrived in 1969 with his version of "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down". Ray began marketing himself more and more country by the mid 1970s. Chet Atkins and Ralph Emery were two key figures in Ray's career once the country direction of his career began to take shape. Ray had charted country in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, and 1974 with specific single releases and he was a frequent guest on country music programming but it wasn't until 1975 when Ray's single releases began performing even more successfully with country audiences. "Misty", arranged in a Bluegrass style, won Ray a Grammy for Best Arrangement. Ray charted several more country hits as the 1970's ended: "Indian Love Call", "Young Love", "You Are So Beautiful", "Honky Tonk Waltz", "In the Mood", "Dixie Hummingbird", "Get Crazy With Me", and "Be Your Own Best Friend". On regional television commercials Ray was the spokesman for Flav-O-Rich dairy products. I added that tidbit to reinforce the country direction in Ray's career. In 1979 he charted pop for the final time with the novelty "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow". 

This brings to an end Part One. I'll write Part Two in a couple of hours! 

November 14, 2022

Ray Stevens: 8 Days Until Musicians Hall of Fame Induction...

Hello Ray Stevens fans!! The news broke a couple of weeks ago that Ray Stevens would be one of the newest members of the Musicians Hall of Fame. The ceremony is scheduled to take place on November 22 which is next Tuesday...so we're just 8 days away. I wrote a blog entry back on October 30th promoting the breaking news of Ray's upcoming induction and time flies as we find ourselves 8 days from the induction ceremony. 

It was in November 2020 that the late founder of the Musicians Hall of Fame, Joe Chambers, conducted an in-depth interview with Ray. That interview is on YouTube and I've posted it in a previous blog entry or two. It was in that interview where Ray not only revealed that he'd recently signed a lengthy contract with Curb Records but it was also revealed that he'd be releasing a 4-CD box set. This project, Iconic Songs of the 20th Century, had quite a lengthy run on Amazon's top seller lists in 2021. It placed among the top selling Country titles as well as the top selling Soundtrack titles. I questioned on here as to why Amazon would place a box set, which had nothing to do with a film or TV soundtrack, on a list of top selling Soundtracks. I made a guess back then that Amazon placed it among the Soundtrack top sellers because the box set has the sub-title of The Soundtrack Of Our Lives. It seems so obvious looking back now...but back then it was a mini-crisis on my part until it dawned on me that the box set's sub-title had something to do with it. The 4-CD box set peaked in the Top-30 on the Amazon Soundtrack top sellers list and the Top-40 in the Amazon Country list. The box set was released in the summer of 2021. Each CD in the box set can also be purchased/downloaded separately. It's available as a physical album as well as a digital download album. The physical album comes complete with musician credits, songwriter credits, production credits, and arrangement credits in each CD's fold-out cover. 


I am still trying to find out if the November 22nd ceremony will be streamed online or if it'll be recorded and played at a later date. Maybe aired on a TV station? RFD-TV? Circle TV? As a fan of Ray Stevens, as I'm guessing you are, too, we want to see some photos from the ceremony and see whatever plaque or medallion, etc. gets presented to Ray Stevens on induction night. It's the 7th Annual Musicians Hall of Fame Concert and Induction Ceremony. Their website features a promo for the upcoming November 22nd ceremony but in the Inductee's section it cuts off at the previous ceremony and so, my guess, once the upcoming ceremony concludes next Tuesday their website will be updated and show the newest members inducted to the Musicians Hall of Fame

This particular Hall of Fame is non-partisan...it doesn't single out any specific music format to honor. It's a Hall of Fame for musicians and those who literally make the music (songwriters, musicians, recording engineers, producers) and it relies less on those who sing the songs. Now, obviously, there are so many singer-songwriters that have come and gone in all forms of music and so it's natural that a lot of recording artists are members of the Musicians Hall of Fame by virtue of the fact that they're musicians, too. Ray Stevens is one of the unique ones in that he not only is a singer but he's also a songwriter, a musician, a record producer, a music arranger, a music publisher, and a music video performer. In songwriting it gets broken down into two areas: composer and lyricist. Ray can do both. He can read and write music (the role of a composer) and he can obviously write lyrics (the role of a lyricist). 

Ray Stevens: CabaRay Nashville on YouTube E-12, S-2

Once again I bring you an overview of the most recent YouTube upload of the Ray Stevens CabaRay Nashville show. This time around it's Episode 12, Season 2 guest starring Jimmy Wayne. Ray opens the show with a rousing rendition of "Smoky Mountain Rattlesnake Retreat", a comedy song that originated in 1986 on Ray's Surely You Joust comedy album. When I saw Ray in concert the 1986 song was in his set list but I don't know if it's still a part of his set list as of 2022. I saw him in concert a few times...twice in Renfro Valley, Kentucky; once in Nashville, Indiana; and a couple of years ago at the CabaRay showroom in Nashville, Tennessee. 

Overall this particular episode is a somber one. Jimmy Wayne discusses his turbulent upbringing, coming from a broken home, and his eventual success in country music. It's part of a book that the two discuss at the start of the interview segment. In the years leading up to his appearance on Ray's CabaRay Nashville show Jimmy had authored/co-authored several books with a foster home/homeless theme. The names of his books are Paper Angels (2012), Walk to Beautiful: The Power of Love and a Homeless Kid who Found the Way (2014), and the children's book Ruby the Foster Dog (2017). Jimmy speaks of the homeless and the need for an abundance of foster homes. In this episode Jimmy spotlights the 2014 book. He speaks of his being raised in a foster home. He sings "Sara Smile", a single from 2009 and one of his first releases, "I Love You This Much", from 2003. This doesn't have anything to do with the show but I thought it interesting to share that a nearby neighbor of mine looks a lot like Jimmy Wayne from a distance. When I seen this episode the first time around I couldn't help not to notice the similarities. 


Ray's second song of the episode is "Safe at Home" and I think it's the first song that Ray recorded from the pen of Nick Sibley who would go on to pen a couple of other songs Ray recorded. It first shown up in 2000 on an album Ray put out called Ear Candy. The songs from that album, well, most of them, would resurface in 2002 when Curb Records issued Ray's Osama Yo' Mama comedy album. Almost a decade later, in 2010, "Safe at Home" found itself on the track list of Ray's album that year, We The People. It's safe to assume that the song means a lot to Ray given the fact that he's kept it part of his shows for more than 20 years. When I saw Ray in concert, yes, he sang "Safe at Home". Now, for those keeping track, this is the next to last episode of Season Two. The seasons of the series consist of 13 episodes each. 


If this series is something brand new to you then I thought it appropriate to explain that CabaRay Nashville is a music/talk show...but there isn't a desk and a long couch. Ray uses his red piano as his 'desk' and whoever the special guest happens to be sits next to the piano during the interview segment. Sometimes, if the guest sings an informal duet with Ray, the guest remains seated next to the piano. The main song from a guest takes place out front of the piano with the show's band seated off to the side. Ray sings the opening and closing songs of the show singing from that area, too...unless he's playing the piano during the performance. In that case he sings from where you see him in the photo above.