Showing posts with label country radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label country radio. Show all posts

June 3, 2021

Ray Stevens: The Country Gold podcast...

Hello all you fans of Ray Stevens!! As we eagerly await the release of his upcoming novelty song, "Gas", this Friday let's take a moment and listen to an interview he gave to Terri Clark on the syndicated radio show, Country Gold. This interview was conducted in mid-April of this year and I made mention of it at the time and I wrote down a brief summary of the interview from notes I'd written. The podcast had never been uploaded to the Country Gold webpage until a couple of days ago. It's just by pure luck that I did a Google news search for Ray and among the recent results was a site containing the podcast of Ray's interview with Terri Clark. 


The interview is from mid-April and so it's in the middle of the digital album releases and so there's a bit of a dated feel to the interview just two months later. Ray speaks of the albums and then mentions he's working on four more digital albums to be released at some point in a sequel to the albums that were currently being released. Ray speaks about what it felt like being elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. He gives a first hand account of the differences between playing a theater in Branson and the CabaRay showroom. When the interview was being conducted Ray hadn't made any kind of announcement about the CabaRay having it's re-opening in September and so that bit of information, obviously, won't be discussed in the interview. You can listen to the podcast by clicking HERE

March 17, 2020

Ray Stevens: The Ralph Emery Show, June 1975...

Ray Stevens, 1975
It's me once again!! Yesterday afternoon I wrote a blog entry where I posted a link to a 1975 interview that Ray Stevens gave on The Ralph Emery Show. When listening to it, near the end, Ralph reminded listeners that Ray would return tomorrow. This syndicated radio program that Ralph hosted would feature a special guest for an entire week of shows. As of this writing the June 23rd and June 24th episodes are available on YouTube. The one that uploaded these left a comment when I inquired if more would appear. He said that he'd be uploading the rest of that week's episodes and to be on the lookout for them. I posted a link to the June 23rd episode and I'll be posting a link to the June 24th episode as well. Once all five episodes from that week are available I'll write a blog entry with links to all five episodes. I'm not embedding the videos because the photo's used can be confusing to some. The June 23rd episode has a photo of Ralph and Ray from 1979/1980 while the June 24th episode features a photo of Ray and Ralph from 2015. I'm sure the one uploading these interviews is using those photos because they feature Ray and Ralph...even though the photos chosen don't match the year in which the interviews took place. I understand this...there are photos of Ray and Ralph available on-line but to try and find one from a particular year, like 1975, is almost impossible. Ray's beard throws off a lot of people...not many fans recall that for a period of time in the early and mid 1970s he had a beard...the album covers of Losin' Streak (1973) and The Very Best of Ray Stevens (1975) show this as does the photo above...in addition to some of his television appearances from this era...but by and large he was clean shaven throughout the decade. The album cover of Misty (1975) has him clean shaven in contrast to his bearded look on The Very Best of Ray Stevens (1975).

The link to the June 23rd episode that I posted in a previous blog entry I'm going to post again. That episode can be heard when you click HERE. When you're over on YouTube you may see the June 24th interview posted, too. If not, return to this blog and click HERE. The June 25th, 26th, and 27th episodes I'll be on the lookout for. The interviews are uptempo...a lot of laughs...and you'll hear original commercials and you'll hear songs from other artists, since it's a radio show after all, and you'll get to hear Ray's reaction to some of the songs played. In one of those interviews there's an extremely rare audio of Dolly Parton and Ronnie Milsap singing a duet. Ray is also heard mentioning that he's working on a very, very weird recording...no more details are given...but it has me thinking he was making a reference to something that wouldn't hit, commercially, until more than a year later at the end of 1976, "In the Mood". When you listen to the interview see if you don't come to the same conclusion.

I created a collage and placed two 1975 Ray Stevens albums side by side. I captioned the collage but don't take it seriously. It doesn't really matter if he's clean shaven or bearded, does it? I like to highlight it nevertheless...but clean shaven or bearded it's Ray Stevens...and that's all that matters.

Ray Stevens: Clean Shaven or Bearded? That is the Question!

January 15, 2010

Where's the Country Music Coverage for Ray Stevens?

It's been a month and four days since "We The People" from Ray Stevens was uploaded onto You Tube. December 11, 2009 is the exact date and since then it's gotten 2,071,569 hits, or plays, whichever term one uses. The commercial single is also a hit on Amazon as it's been among the Top-50 Mp3 singles for several weeks. There is a physical copy of the single available for purchase, too, and it can be found at Ray's web-site store. Given that it's a physical copy it'll cost just a bit higher because you'll be paying for the actual CD and it's case.

Anyway, the subject of this specific blog entry is about my confusion over why "We The People" isn't heavily publicized among country music circles. The last I remember I thought Ray Stevens was considered a country comedian and given the phenomenal success of the music video doesn't it seem a bit strange that the two leading country music outlets, CMT and GAC, have nothing on their web-sites about Ray's accomplishment...not even in their news sections...

When you search CMT for Ray Stevens news it'll bring up news from March 2009 in which Ray's name is mentioned in passing as an act associated with Curb Records. To date that's the last news item they've added about Ray Stevens. If you're at GAC's web-site and search for news about Ray Stevens it'll take you to a page where his name is tagged within stories that don't really have anything to do with him, much like CMT's news section on Ray Stevens. At the GAC web-site, the last time Ray's name was mentioned in a news item was an October 2009 article and it wasn't about his music or his latest happenings.

So, you see, there's not been any coverage among country music media that I'm aware of for "We The People" and I'm wondering why. Even though I know that the single isn't going to get mainstream airplay on country radio it still doesn't mean that the country music media should also ignore the song...the fact is there are plenty of write-up's in country music publications about songs and albums by acts marketed as "country" that won't get embraced by radio so why is Ray's song any different. It isn't that he needs the publicity from country music's media but it just looks odd that he hasn't gotten any coverage at all about the song from the country music media and it's been over a month since the music video debuted.

Maybe because CMT and GAC are known as music video channels they feel awkward if they'd publicize Ray's success on You Tube? That's a possibility but what excuse do the country music critics and columnists have for not talking about it? Is it the overt political nature of the song that makes the country media nervous? If this is the case, Toby Keith's been quite political for years and he's gotten coverage.