Showing posts with label teen love ballad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teen love ballad. Show all posts

March 8, 2020

Ray Stevens: 45 at 62...

Hello once again! Upon the time change earlier this morning I'm looking out the window at the darkness at 6:41am...before the time change the sun had already risen by this time of day. The time change is designed to make the spring and summer days have increased hours of sunlight, as far as I know, I don't really get into it that  much. I just spring forward and fall back simply because that's the way it is. The way it was for Ray Stevens in 1958, though, seen him releasing music on Capitol Records. He had previously issued some songs on a subsidiary label of Capitol, Prep Records, but in 1958 he issued several recordings on Capitol and they were produced by Ken Nelson. In total Capitol issued three singles on Ray in 1958 which adds up to six recordings (A-side/B-side). Their first single release was "Chickie Chickie Wah Wah", the subject of this blog entry. An audio clip of the song was uploaded onto YouTube this past Monday and I've embedded it below...



Capitol Records issued the single in May of 1958 with the B-side "Crying Goodbye" from the pen of Ric Cartey. A majority of the songs being recorded by Ray as well as the songs being written by Ray and recorded by other recording acts, and the songs Ray recorded but didn't write in this late '50s time period, were all published by Bill Lowery. Ric Cartey, for example, was a co-writer of one of Lowery Music's biggest copyrights, "Young Love", recorded by Sonny James and then recorded by Tab Hunter in addition to it being recorded first by Ric Cartey himself; years later Ray Stevens would record his rendition of the song and he reached the Country charts with it in 1975.

"Chickie Chickie Wah Wah", in the meantime, carries a very uptempo melody...the saxophone sets the mood. There's always been a tinge of rhythm and blues in Ray's pop music offerings...and a lot of that can be traced to the classic rhythm and blues groups and recording artists he grew up hearing and being influenced by in his earlier years. As most of you know the earliest recordings from Ray Stevens carry a heavy dose of rhythm and blues, catchy melodies/lyrics, and most were in the vein of the teen love ballad of that time period.

His next two single releases for Capitol in 1958 were: "Love Goes on Forever" / "Cat Pants" in August followed by "The Clown" / "School" in November. In the latter release Ken Nelson is credited as the record producer but he was not credited on Ray's first two single releases on Capitol. If you know your Ray Stevens history then you should be aware of the fact that Ken Nelson is the one responsible for urging Harold Ragsdale to come up with a stage name...after some thinking Harold came up with 'Ray Stevens'...and the rest is history.

October 8, 2010

Examining 1962's Ray Stevens...

In my previous blog entry I examined the year 1992 and today we'll journey 30 years prior to that in 1962! This is the year that is all-important in the career of Ray Stevens because it was 1962 that saw the debut of "Ahab the Arab". This single would tickle the funny bone of America and eventually peak inside the Top-5 of the Hot 100 pop chart. If that wasn't exciting enough the single also crossed-over and reached the Top-10 on the R&B chart. The single was reported to sell over a million copies...it was the third million selling single that Ray was a part of during a recording session at Mercury. Ray took part in the recording of "Wooden Heart" by Joe Dowell and "Walk on By", a huge hit for Leroy Van Dyke. The producer of Ray's material in 1962 was a man by the name of Shelby Singleton. In those days Ray wasn't the producer of his songs but he dabbled in arranging and session work and he slowly stepped into the producer's chair once he joined the Monument label. Ray wrote or co-wrote a large majority of his songs...something that would continue virtually non-stop through the early 1980's before he scaled back on his songwriting to maybe one or two per album.

The teenage love ballad "It's Been So Long" is the B-side of "Ahab the Arab". It's amazing that although the single sold in the millions because of the A-side nobody remembers the B-side...and perhaps one of the trade-offs in the early and mid '60s for Ray is that while he was becoming known in the pop music world as a novelty artist/comedy singer he was allowed to put serious, non-comical recordings as B-sides. Possibly someone out there would have thought to turn the single over and listen to the serious artist beneath the comical image...and perhaps there were people out there who in fact did listen to the single's B-side but certainly not enough people to garner attention to it...and so it would take several years before the serious side of Ray Stevens gained a widespread following.

Late 1962 saw the release of the holiday single, "Santa Claus Is Watching You". There is a longer version and then there is the edited version for radio stations. The longer version includes additional lyrics and features Ray describing the click-clack-click of the reindeer hoofs and the direction in which the reindeer are flying amongst other things. The radio edit cuts out this verse...but the edit is so obvious that those who are unaware that there are two versions could tell there was an edit in the recording. Ray's speech pattern jumps from mid-tempo to up-tempo in split second fashion in the radio edit that you're left wondering "was something cut out?".

The unedited recording of the song is on the Rhino collection, The Best of Ray Stevens. The single would peak in the Top-50 on the pop chart...it would get almost entirely re-written by Ray in 1985 and it's that recording most people are familiar with. The 1962 recording is much more directed at children while the 1985 update is geared toward the adults. The edited version can be found on All-Time Hits, issued by Mercury in 1996 as well as the 1970 compilation, The Best of Ray Stevens, that Mercury released. In addition to the 1997 collection from Rhino, the unedited 1962 version of the song can be found on You Tube...uploaded by a user named verycoolsound...and here it is...