Showing posts with label vinyl records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vinyl records. Show all posts

May 23, 2020

Ray Stevens: Singling Out Funny Man...

1963 "Funny Man" single
Hello all and welcome to another installment in this Singling Out series of blog entries. In the first installment of the series I spotlighted a 1963 single from Ray Stevens titled "Speed Ball" backed with "It's Party Time" and I've singled out several other recordings from my Ray Stevens collection since then. This "Funny Man" single was purchased at a local flea market and finding it among the singles was something of a surprise considering most, if not all, dealers that sell vinyl albums and singles at flea markets concentrate on rock and roll records. The dealer's cubicle, as I call it, had a lot of vinyl singles randomly lined up in plastic bins on half a dozen tables. There were boxes of vinyl albums placed on other tables. Anyway, I purchased "Funny Man" there. If you notice there's some graffiti on the label. Whoever previously owned the single felt the need to circle, in blue ink, the single's running time. It's a promo copy re-release...which is rare in and of itself. This promo copy, according to on-line sources, was released by Mercury Records in 1968. The catalog number is 72816. The promo single of "Funny Man" issued by Mercury in 1963 has a green colored label and it's catalog number is 72098. The song is a love ballad...and it would probably have fit the description of angst and heartbreak. Ray sings of a man with a reputation of being a comic and playing it so well in public that it hides underlying feelings of sorrow. He would tackle this theme in a different kind of presentation with "It's Party Time". "Funny Man" reached the Hot 100 in the U.S. and was a regional hit in Canada. Pop radio stations used to conduct their own countdowns based on listener requests in case you're wondering what 'regional hit' means.

1963 B-side of "Funny Man"
The B-side has some graffiti on it as well. The Mercury Records logo at the top is filled in with a red marker by a previous owner. Now, if I were to see this single listed on-line and it had markings on it, I wouldn't even bother purchasing it...but since it was at a flea market and chances are on-line sellers may ask a high price for this single, whether there's markings on it or not, I decided to buy it. The B-side is another love ballad and it's titled "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". In this particular ballad, which is heavier on strings and production than "Funny Man", Ray sings of a relationship that's fallen apart. The song is a character study of a man who tries to convince himself that he no longer cares about a woman and he minimizes her leaving him as "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". The songs on this single come from Ray's second studio album, This is Ray Stevens. In the previous paragraph I mentioned that this is a re-release of the 1963 promo single of "Funny Man" and "Just One of Life's Little Tragedies". The irony of Mercury Records deciding to re-issue the 1963 recordings on a vinyl single in 1968 could have been in response to the fact that Ray re-recorded "Funny Man" for his 1968 Monument album, Even Stevens, but with a completely different arrangement. It's hard to tell why Mercury re-issued a promo and regular copy of "Funny Man" in 1968 but re-issue it they did...and the promo re-issue is in my collection.

May 22, 2020

Ray Stevens: Singling Out I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O.

Me with 1989 Ray Stevens vinyl single
In this edition of the Singling Out series I take a look at one of the last vinyl singles released on Ray Stevens. Throughout much of the 1980s the vinyl format continued to have wide distribution and it continued to have a presence in retail stores along side their smaller counterpart, the cassette tape. The presence of vinyl albums and singles began to rapidly disappear in the late 1980s even though manufacturing of them remained for turntable equipped jukeboxes and for mail-order record clubs but vinyl was becoming less and less visible in retail stores. The cassette, along with the emergence of the compact disc (CD), became the dominant format of music consumption and so vinyl releases became scarce and often were only found in privately owned, local record shops specializing in the sale of vinyl records and if you happen to be fans of country music the Ernest Tubb Record Shop continued to offer vinyl and in some cases that store had exclusive vinyl records. Jukeboxes began to vanish, too...those that remained in use had been converted from being equipped with a turntable for vinyl singles to being manufactured for CD's. The operation of the jukebox remained the same...you put in the money and make the song selection and instead of a vinyl single being pulled out and played on a jukebox turntable the song would automatically begin playing due to the memory of the computerized programming. You select B-6, for example, and the jukebox's computer memory will know what song to play. This vinyl single from Ray Stevens is "I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O.". The song was found on his 1989 album, Beside Myself, and he performed it on several television shows that year. It was not a 'radio hit' but it became popular. Ray and Buddy Kalb wrote the song. The main concept of the song centers around the various Elvis sightings that frequently appeared in tabloid newspapers since the late '70s. I have no idea why those tabloid stories became so frequent...Elvis didn't vanish or disappear in 1977...he passed away; so it's always puzzled me why Elvis sightings became something of a fad and had such a presence.

The song tells the story of a couple that are camping in the woods. The performance begins with a narration/recitation. An anchorman telling us that we're tuned into the 'evening news' and he hands the story off to their literal field reporter, Renaldo Rivera (a pun on Geraldo Rivera). Renaldo interviews a witness who goes into his story of having seen a U.F.O. land just beyond their Winnebago and when he went over for a closer look pink aliens emerged and then he says he looked inside the U.F.O. and "there he was!!", the reporter asks "there who was??", and after a brief music interlude the witness emphatically declares: "I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O." and the singing portion of the song commences. When Ray performed the song in concert he used props and visuals...a large U.F.O. would hover over top of the stage...he'd have people dressed in pink alien suits 'emerge' and then run around the stage and out into the audience. In the song's conclusion, amid all the smoke of the U.F.O., he gets beamed aboard the U.F.O. which lifts upward and out of sight. If the performance includes post-production Ray literally vanishes on-screen but in his Branson, Missouri performances in the early 1990s a life size dummy of Ray in Elvis attire on wires is hoisted upward toward the U.F.O..

Me with Ray Stevens B-side vinyl
The B-side of "I Saw Elvis in a U.F.O." is the equally funny "I Used To Be Crazy". As so many Ray Stevens comedy songs have done it's taken on a life of it's own. Although it originally emerged on 1989's Beside Myself as the closing track and is found as a B-side in single format, "I Used To Be Crazy" has gotten a lot more exposure in the years since. He made a music video of the song in 1995...part of his direct-to-VHS movie, Get Serious!. That music video was recently uploaded on Ray's YouTube channel where it gained a whole lot more exposure than it otherwise had. Ray and Buddy Kalb wrote the song and it allows Ray to demonstrate his skill of mimicry. The subject matter enables Ray to deliver his impressions of chickens, dogs, mad English Kings from the 1700s, Walter Brennan, John Wayne. Along the way he lets out with a loud, shrieking scream...it happens in a section of the song where he mentions that on some days doesn't everybody from time to time enjoy a 'little' primal scream?? In the 1995 music video he performs the song in an Americanized Austrian accent but in the 1989 original recording he performs the song in his natural voice...except when he demonstrates his mimicry. The concept of the song is a case study in irony. He proclaims he used to be crazy but yet he's a whole lot better now...yeah, right!! This vinyl single was the last one released on Ray Stevens by MCA Records. There would be two vinyl singles released on Ray by Curb/Capitol Records in 1990 in limited availability but then that was it as far as vinyl releases go. The very first vinyl single released on Ray was "Silver Bracelet" in 1957 on Capitol Records subsidiary, Prep Records.