Showing posts with label gilbert and sullivan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gilbert and sullivan. Show all posts

November 4, 2019

Ray Stevens of the Seven Seas...

Arriving on the internet yesterday and having reacted to it on YouTube and on other social media sites I'm now embedding the video clip on my fan created Ray Stevens blog...



The above performance comes from the early 1990s special, The Country Comedy Hour. If you remember, a couple of weeks ago, Ray uploaded several comical sketches of himself and Ruth Buzzi pulled from that same special. If you look closely you'll see Ruth Buzzi in the performance...as well as comedy duo Williams and Ree. In fact, Ruth is the pirate standing between the comedy duo. The three of them are the pirates with the most camera time (aside from the two character's that Ray is playing). I love the finale of the song...it comes across as the kind of song and dance routine you'd see on the Broadway stage complete with an arms spread wide finish. In an example of video trickery Ray appears side by side as both pirates standing in front of the crew during the finale. The only difference in the performance of the song and the recording is that in the recording the two pirates have a back and fourth conversation during the fade out of the song...with the feminine pirate suggesting a series of fine dining cuisine that the gruff pirate should try...all the suggestions naturally being met with disdain and disgust.  

"The Pirate Song" is a popular recording from Ray Stevens although it was never officially released as a single in the traditional sense. It is one of those examples of a Ray Stevens recording that became popular mostly through word of mouth, unsolicited airplay, and consumer discovery. The song dates back to 1985...it originally appeared on Ray's album, I Have Returned. That particular release being a Gold album and one that hit the top spot on Billboard's Country Album chart early in 1986...the song benefited from exposure generated from that album...however, the fact that a song originates on a Gold album doesn't necessarily mean it will generate a strong following of fans but "The Pirate Song" did. The song is a take off on the Gilbert and Sullivan opera, The Pirates of Penzance. The opera is mentioned within the lyrics of the song when a clearly feminine pirate rejects the lifestyle and formalities of the traditional pirate (complaining "I don't like it...") and insists upon singing and dancing instead. The song's subtitle, "I Want to Sing and Dance", is a phrase heard during the chorus.

Ray resurrected the song in 1991 for inclusion on his comedy album that year, Number One with a Bullet. The video clip embedded above, in my opinion, was taped at some point during this time period. As is the case with the comedy sketches Ray uploaded several weeks ago, in addition to this performance of "The Pirate Song", it's credited to a special called The Country Comedy Hour...something I've still not been able to find any information on. I don't know if it was a televised special or if it was a pilot that Ray did for a proposed television series...and so I'm careful not to refer to it as a televised special because, as of this writing, I have no idea if the show ever aired on TV or not. The fact that Ray takes center stage in these performances leads me to think it was a pilot for a television series...much like Amazing Rolling Revue happened to be. The only difference being that pilot seen a VHS release in 1992 and yet if The Country Comedy Hour turns out to have also been a pilot then, for a lot us, it'll perhaps remain a mystery as to why it had never gotten a release on VHS back then as well. In the photo seen below it's Ray in character as Long John Blackbeard Peg Leg Patch-eye Hook delivering one of his demands. Also in the photo is Bruce Williams (of the comedy duo, Williams and Ree).

Ray Stevens and Bruce Williams
The performance of the song, choreographically, is almost step for step how it was performed in the official music video. The official music video arrived in 2000 on a VHS from Ray titled Funniest Video Characters. It's the VHS that featured the much anticipated music video of "The Blue Cyclone"...that music video was anticipated by his fans so much that the cover of the VHS features Ray in a headlock from The Blue Cyclone to alert the fans that a music video for that song was included in the collection.

In the official video for "The Pirate Song" the quartet of pirates seen in the background are performed by shirtless John Ragsdale (Ray's brother), Buddy Kalb, Ralph Emery, and if I remember correctly a man named Randy Cullers. If it's him he's also the illustrator/animator of the Ray Stevens group. In the early '90s performance embedded at the top of this blog entry the trio of pirates are Bruce Williams, Ruth Buzzi, and Terry Ree. There are a few visual differences in the costumes worn by the pirates in the early '90s performance and the 2000 music video but, as said, the choreography literally remains the same. It's an early example of Ray's mastery of video production...and that mastery is one of the things highlighted on his Country Music Hall of Fame plaque.

March 29, 2011

Sailing the Seas with Ray Stevens...

It isn't something I normally keep track of but I was reading some things on the internet the other day stating that the Gilbert and Sullivan opera, The Pirates of Penzance, opened in London for the first time on April 3, 1880 and, doing the math, it's nearing the end of a 130 year anniversary. This comical opera, in addition to pirate culture in general, no doubt inspired Buddy Kalb and his wife, Carlene, to write "The Pirate Song" which is sub-titled "I Want To Sing and Dance". The song was recorded by Ray Stevens in 1985 and was part of his comedy album, I Have Returned. The album is coming off of an anniversary...it was 25 years ago this month, March 1986, that the album was #1 on the country album chart. The album had been released late in 1985 and slowly made it's way up to #1. His previous album titled He Thinks He's Ray Stevens, released late in 1984, was still on the charts around the time his 1985 album made it's debut. Ray made a music video of this song in 2000 and included it in a home video titled Funniest Video Characters. The music video is as funny as you may expect (for those familiar with the song). Toward the end of the song Ray, in gruff pirate vocal, mentions the Gilbert and Sullivan duo. The focal point of the song is the contrasts between a traditional gruff-speaking, bloodthirsty pirate and a not so gruff speaking, bloodthirsty pirate. Each pirate is voiced by Ray and it's the passive pirate who takes center stage with dreams of being in the Pirates of Penzance...singing and dancing his way into world history. A later recording of this song arrived in 1991 and even a third recording emerged in 2000 when the music video was put together. The original is on this 1985 album whereas the 1991 and 2000 re-recordings often show up on compilation releases.