Showing posts with label 30 years. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 30 years. Show all posts

June 15, 2021

Ray Stevens: Branson...June 15th 1991...

It's a really hot 80 degree day on this June 15th...it was exactly 30 years ago in 1991 that Ray Stevens had the grand opening of his Branson, Missouri theater. Ray's theater had a tremendous impact on the town's economy and, if truth be told, inspired other performers to open up theaters and make Branson, Missouri a tourist destination. Branson's theater district, if I recall correctly, originally began with just a couple of venues popping up. The Baldknobbers, Boxcar Willie (the first nationally known performer to open a theater in Branson), and later on Roy Clark...from there music venues began to sprout...Ray Stevens became interested in the town in 1990. Soon after Mickey Gilley, Jim Stafford, Mel Tillis, Glen Campbell, Andy Williams, Tony Orlando, Shoji Tabuchi, and local performers set up performance venues. A two lane highway filled with theaters and other types of entertainment prompted chronic traffic jams according to local reports. 

Ray Stevens began building his theater in the latter half of 1990 and it was ready for business on June 15, 1991. Ray had been performing a series of concerts at Roy Clark's Celebrity Theater in Branson and it inspired him to think about opening up his own theater. Ray, having a secondary passion for architecture, designed the theater. Two VHS tapes were released in 1993 of a concert taped at Ray's theater. Ray Stevens Live! was sold over television and became a Platinum selling VHS. It was released to retail outlets by Curb Records in 1994. The second half of the concert was sold as More Ray Stevens Live! and was only available through Ray's fan club (fan club members received catalog pamphlets in the mail with an attached order form). The More Ray Stevens Live! VHS was also sold at the theater's gift shop. The following television commercial aired in 1992...


Ray performed two shows a day, 6 days a week at his Branson theater. The theater would close down each year just prior to Christmas and then re-open in the late spring the following year. Ray kept this schedule during the 1991, 1992, and 1993 seasons...and he closed down his theater following the 1993 season and put it up for sale. The property wasn't immediately purchased and so Ray became a landlord and rented out the venue to an organization that presented a series called Country Tonite

Ray was no stranger at being a landlord...he owned and rented out property in and around the Music Row area in Nashville for several decades. He was often co-owner of property with Chet Atkins. Anyway, the Country Tonite program occupied the Ray Stevens theater in Branson from 1994 until 2004. Shortly after the Country Tonite program vacated the theater in 2004 Ray decided to do some interior redecoration and and he began performing concerts at his theater once again by the summer of 2005. Ray didn't do the 2 shows a day, 6 days a week schedule he once did...this time the schedule was way more relaxed. 

He ended up doing two seasons worth of concerts (2005 and 2006) before ultimately selling the theater. Since then Ray has returned to Branson several times for limited performances at other artist's theaters but this and all other touring came to an end in 2018 when his CabaRay showroom opened in Nashville. Those wanting to see Ray Stevens in concert will have to visit his CabaRay showroom when it re-opens this September. 

January 20, 2012

Ray Stevens: Don't Laugh...at 30...

This is going to be fun...well, all of the blogs I write are fun for me but particularly this entry where we shine a spotlight on 1982 and the Ray Stevens album out that year, Don't Laugh Now. 30 years ago Don't Laugh Now hit the record stores loaded with all sorts of wonderful songs from Ray Stevens...one in particular being "Where the Sun Don't Shine". In fact, that song and "Written Down In My Heart" were the only two singles lifted from the album. Even though the album is titled Don't Laugh Now, "Where the Sun Don't Shine" brings a chuckle as well as a smile to anyone's face when they hear it. The song is arranged in an old-fashioned gospel production which masks the whimsical lyrics. It's a sing-a-long in the truest sense. I don't know the specifics of why the album was titled what it was but I assume it was given that title given Ray's reputation for comical songs. One of the bizarre scenarios in all of music is how a lot of people singled out a few comical recordings from Ray Stevens and immediately declared him a novelty artist. At least that was what happened throughout Ray's career up until 1984 when he decided to just go comedy all the time with his recordings. Prior to 1984 Ray had only released a handful of novelty songs and only 3 albums devoted entirely to comedy songs: 1969's Gitarzan, 1974's Boogity-Boogity, and 1980's Shriner's Convention. It's mind boggling once you realize that between the years of 1968 and 1981 Ray Stevens released just 3 albums of comedy songs...meaning that his non-comedy output was much more dominant...and yet his reputation as a novelty artist remained strong throughout decades of where he issued non-comedy recordings. Since 1984 he's released a variety of comedy albums and became highly visible on the late, great Nashville Network (1983-1998) with his country comedy offerings.

"Written Down In My Heart" was issued as a standard vinyl single in 1982...plus it was released in a special gold colored edition that you see here. This same feature was also given to "Where The Sun Don't Shine" when it was issued as a single, too. The single is a love ballad and it reached the Country Top-40 in 1982. This would also be his next to last Top-40 Country hit. (He would later reach the Country Top-40 for the final time in early 1985 with a comedy song). Although Ray's singles would not reach the Country Top-40 after 1985 it didn't mean that his singles weren't popular with record buyers. Country radio had seemingly developed an intolerance toward comedy/novelty offerings and if radio stations played a comedy song it would either be during the overnight hours or early in the mornings where a lot of listeners wouldn't hear it. Ray's albums during his switch to all-comedy sold hundreds of thousands of copies...an impressive achievement considering the lack of genuine support from radio. As far as television appearances go, Ray performed "Written Down In My Heart" on an episode of Hee-Haw in 1982. He performed "Where the Sun Don't Shine" on an episode of That Nashville Music. "Country Boy, Country Club Girl" was performed during the Music City News Top Hits of the Year telecast in 1983. The show spotlighted the hit songs of the previous year. Ray co-hosted the show and I believe one of the perks of being the co-host allowed him to choose a song from his 1982 album to perform. The other host, Tammy Wynette, sang a song, too. The two of them opened the show singing "We've Got the Music in Music City".

Don't Laugh Now contains 10 songs. The album was dramatically different from the release in 1981 titled One More Last Chance. The 1981 album was heavy with slow-tempo ballads where as Don't Laugh Now has ballads, too, but they're mid-tempo. Side One (tracks 1 through 5) features just 1 slow-tempo ballad amongst the uptempo recordings while Side Two (tracks 6 through 10) features mid-tempo ballads and 1 slow song, "This Old Piano".

1. Such a Night
2. Written Down In My Heart
3. Take That Girl Away
4. Always There
5. Where The Sun Don't Shine***
6. Oh Leo Lady
7. Don't Laugh Now
8. This Old Piano
9. Country Boy, Country Club Girl***
10. Why Don't We Go Somewhere and Make Love***

***- These recordings were featured on the Collector's Series release. The original release arrived in 1985 whereas a re-issue happened in 1987. The 1987 re-issue received a CD counterpart in 1992.