Showing posts with label Help me Make It Through the Night. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Help me Make It Through the Night. Show all posts

March 31, 2020

Ray Stevens: 30 Years and Lend Me Your Ears...

Ray Stevens; 1990
Hello all...no doubt when you're browsing the internet and looking for Ray Stevens images you've come across the album cover of this 1990 release, Lend Me Your Ears. It's a comedy album from Ray Stevens, as if you couldn't tell from the photo, and it turns 30 this year. The photo session took place in Nashville's Centennial Park where there's something of a tourist attraction located there...a large replica of the Parthenon. Ray in Shakespeare attire is seen in front of the Parthenon replica and firmly taking hold of a rabbit. The album's title has various meanings. The most obvious is the request for music consumers to take a listen to the album but another reason for the album's title is tied into the photo and it's recreation of Marc Antony from the Shakespeare play, Julius Caesar. It is in that play where the phrase "...lend me your ears..." comes from. There's probably some people out there that looked at the album's title and seen the photo and thought that Ray was being literal and asking the rabbit to lend him his ears...completely missing the point of the album's photo design and title...but yet that's another interpretation one could take away when looking at the art work and album title. This comedy album was not only his first in a brand new decade (the '90s) but it was his first studio album for Curb Records who, at the time of this album's summer 1990 release, were in a distribution partnership with Capitol Records. This is why this particular studio album from Ray is credited to Curb/Capitol Records. Ironically another 1990 release was credited solely to Curb Records, the Gold selling His All Time Greatest Comic Hits. The new decade and his move to Curb Records after a 5-year stay at MCA (1984-1989) also ushered in new directions for Ray that were bubbling under the surface.

As promotion for Lend Me Your Ears there were two music videos taped. "Sittin' Up With the Dead" is the lead off song from the album and it became a music video. The album's third track was Ray's comical rendition of "Help Me Make It Through the Night" and it was performed very much in the vein of one of Ray's music influences, Spike Jones...the recording featured heavy use of sound effects and vocal mayhem but it remained tightly controlled in the execution of it's music. In television appearances that year he promoted the existence of the music videos and how fans could see them on the various music video programs airing on The Nashville Network. Ray's video for "Help Me Make it Through the Night" became a hit and landed on the network's most-played music video list. In addition to those two notable recordings Ray was also performing "Barbecue" and there's an appearance on Hee Haw where Ray performs "Where Do My Socks Go?". There were promotional vinyl singles issued to radio stations of "Sittin' Up With the Dead" and "Help Me Make It Through the Night". They were never sold in retail stores but every once in awhile copies of those vinyl promo singles come up for sale on eBay. They're really obscure and would be of value to Ray Stevens fans given how the quantity is limited. The 1990 album contains ten comedy songs:

1. Sittin' Up With the Dead (live action music video)
2. Jack Daniels, You Lied To Me Again
3. Help Me Make It Through the Night (live action music video)
4. Used Cars
5. Bwana and the Jungle Girl
6. Barbecue (animated music video)
7. Where Do My Socks Go
8. This Ain't Exactly What I Hand In Mind (animated music video)
9. This is Your Daddy's Oldsmobile
10. Cletus McHicks and His Band from the Sticks

Tracks six and eight were turned into limited animation music videos more than 15 years later. The live action music videos were released in 1990. Now, bubbling under the surface right around the time Lend Me Your Ears hit the market, Ray was in the planning/development stages of building a theater in Branson, Missouri. This theater had it's grand opening in 1991 and Ray performed there for three seasons (1991, 1992, and 1993). The concept of a music video being seen as something of a commercial product, rather than a marketing tool, combined with the proliferation of a commercially viable VHS market in the early '90s enabled Ray's career to take on dramatically different directions as the decade continued...yet the decade started off with Lend Me Your Ears in 1990...and several years later one could say the public was lending their eyes to Ray Stevens, too, during the heyday of televised VHS mail-order advertisements.

April 4, 2014

Ray Stevens: Rayality TV webisode 3...

It's that time once again...time to embed the latest webisode from Ray Stevens. Today's upload if you're keeping track is Webisode 3. It keeps the chicken theme from the previous week but spotlights several beloved scenes from the early-mid '90s. If you're familiar with Ray's direct-to-video movie from 1995, Get Serious!, then you're in for a treat as a certain performance from that movie is inserted into this week's webisode. The memories that is brings back!!! I have the movie, yes, but it's fun to see performances from the movie inserted into a different setting.



Don't forget about the 9-CD box set sale...you all have 16 more days to get your order placed to ensure a price of $39.99! The regular price for the box set is $79.95 but you'll be getting it for $40.00 less until April 20th. As I pointed out in my previous blog entry this is perhaps going to be your only chance to get this incredible collection at such a low price.

Ray recorded more than 60 songs exclusively for the box set...his versions of classic novelty songs ranging from the 1930s through the 1980s and he even did a cover of Toby Keith's song, "I Wanna Talk About Me". The only place to find it is on the 9-CD box set. Some of the other songs that Ray recorded include a couple of Roger Miller classics "Chug a Lug", "Kansas City Star", and "Dang Me" plus his renditions on Spike Jones classics...he does additional recordings of many of The Coasters songs, too, and even tackles the funky half-sung, half-spoken classics of Phil Harris ("The Preacher and the Bear", "That's What I Like about the South", and several more).

A lot of the novelty songs predate the mid '50s and a lot of the time 'novelty song' simply meant 'unusual' or 'offbeat' rather than exclusively 'humorous' or 'laugh out loud hysterical'. Over the course of the last 30+ years, 'novelty songs' have come to be synonymous with any recording meant to entice laughter and so the original concept of the 'novelty song' has become murky and muddled over time.

Here's a link to the 9-CD novelty song extravaganza once more...

Ray Stevens 9-CD box set Sale