Showing posts with label basin street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basin street. 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. 

October 12, 2010

Ray Stevens: Nostalgia Valley, Part 15...

I thought it would add some dimension to the blog if I post my Tower of Stevens once again. I posted this many blogs ago but I decided to bring it back. It's a cassette tape tower and on that side of the tower it's my Ray Stevens cassettes. I have much of that material in CD or Mp3 format now and so I don't hardly listen to the cassettes anymore...I just have them for collection sake. The same holds true for my Ray Stevens vinyl albums and 45 RPM singles...I don't play those vinyl albums and singles hardly at all but nonetheless I have them as part of my collection. I'd never part with anything, either! All of my Ray Stevens items are absolutely, 100% priceless. I say that in case anyone out there gets any ideas that I'm someone that likes to sell or trade and the answer is: NO! I'm a collector of Ray Stevens merchandise and therefore I keep everything I've bought through the years. I believe you can click the image for a bigger view but don't quote me on that. The original size of that particular image is way too big for this blog page and so I had to re-size it. I have more Ray Stevens items as I mentioned...vinyl and CD and now Mp3. I also have a few magazines with him on the cover and a couple of magazines with write-up's on his career. Country Weekly did some wonderful stories on Ray in the mid '90s and they also did a story on him late last year or earlier this year. The story was about his longevity and how active he continues to be. Country Weekly subscribers voted Ray their favorite comedian in 1995 during the Golden Pick awards. The magazine did a fabulous, in my opinion, write-up promoting his Get Serious! movie complete with still pictures from the film and commentary from Ray on the set. A year later they did a write-up about his hugely successful home video career and it shown his face popping through a pile of money. The money, of course, was a sight-gag from the movie.

A collection that I've written about before is this 2007 masterpiece, New Orleans Moon. The CD features Ray covering a lot of material associated with Louisiana and New Orleans culture. The title track, "New Orleans Moon", is the only original song in the collection. This ode to New Orleans was written by Ray and Chuck Redden. The rest of the material that Ray covers originated decades earlier by other artists...namely Louis Armstrong. Ray's versions of "Jambalaya" and "The Battle of New Orleans" are great as are "Louisiana Man" and the somber "Louisiana". Aside from those stand-out tracks we also have "When The Saints Go Marching In" which just about everyone has heard at some point or another. I sang this song in elementary music class but the arrangement was not quite like Ray's version of the song! The rock song, "New Orleans", is another stand-out. Ray slips in a quick vocal impression of Louis Armstrong on "New Orleans Moon" when the lyrics reference "Ol' Satchmo". Those who have never heard of this CD and are at least interested should go and get your copy and listen to it. It's a great salute to that part of the country and it's filled with reverence as well. It was released in the summer of 2007 but wasn't promoted as strongly as it should have been.

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. Battle of New Orleans
11. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans