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=== Music === ''Hee Haw'' featured a premiere showcase on commercial television throughout its run for [[Country music|country]], [[Bluegrass music|bluegrass]], [[Gospel music|gospel]], and other styles of American traditional music, featuring hundreds of elite musical performances that were paramount to the success, popularity and legacy of the series for a broad audience of [[Southern United States|Southern]], rural and purely music fans alike. Although country music was the primary genre of music featured on the show, guest stars and cast members alike also performed music from other genres, such as rock 'n' roll oldies, [[big band]], and pop standards. Some of the music-based segments on the show (other than guest stars' performances) included: * '''The [[Million Dollar Band (country music group)|Million Dollar Band]]''' – This was an instrumental band formed of legendary [[Nashville sound|Nashville]] musicians [[Chet Atkins]] (guitar), [[Boots Randolph]] (saxophone), Roy Clark (guitar), [[Floyd Cramer]] (piano), [[Charlie McCoy]] (harmonica), [[Danny Davis (country musician)|Danny Davis]] (trumpet), [[Jethro Burns]] ([[mandolin]]), [[Johnny Gimble]] ([[fiddle]]), backed by a rhythm section consisting of Nashville session super pickers Willie Ackerman (drums), Henry Strzelecki (Bass) and Bobby Thompson (banjo/acoustic guitar); who would frequently appear on the show from 1980 through 1988. The band would perform an instrumental version of a popular song, with each member showcasing his talent on his respective instrument. * '''The Hee Haw Gospel Quartet''' – Beginning in the latter part of the 1970s, this group sang a gospel hymn just before the show's closing. The original lineup consisted of Buck Owens (lead), Roy Clark (tenor), Grandpa Jones (baritone), and Tennessee Ernie Ford (bass). Ford was later replaced by Kenny Price. In contrast to ''Hee Haw's'' general levity, the Quartet's performance was appropriately treated solemnly, with no laughter or applause from the audience. Jones did not wear his signature hat during the segment, and would frequently appear entirely out of his "Grandpa" costume. In the first few seasons that featured the Quartet, cast member Lulu Roman would introduce the group along with the hymn they were about to perform. Several of the Quartet's performances were released as recordings.[https://www.discogs.com/artist/3798551-The-Hee-Haw-Gospel-Quartet] Joe Babcock took over as lead singer after Owens left the show, and Ray Burdette took over as bass singer after the death of Kenny Price; but the Quartet was not featured as often from that point on. However, the show still closed with a gospel song—if not by the Quartet, then by either the entire cast, a guest gospel artist, or cast member Lulu Roman (a gospel artist in her own right). The concept of the Quartet was based on the 1940s group the [[Brown's Ferry Four]], which recorded for King Records and included Grandpa Jones, the [[Delmore Brothers]] and [[Merle Travis]]. Jones suggested the idea to the show's producers, supported by Clark. * '''[[Hager Twins|The Hagers]]''' – This twin brother singing duo would also perform a song each week on the show. They would often perform their own versions of pop/rock songs from the 1960s and 1970s. * '''Performances by cast members''' – In addition to hosts Buck Owens and Roy Clark, who would perform at least one song each week, other cast members—such as Gunilla Hutton, Misty Rowe, Victoria Hallman, Grandpa Jones (sometimes with his wife [[Ramona Jones|Ramona]]), Kenny Price, Archie Campbell, Barbi Benton, The Nashville Edition, Vicki Bird, and Diana Goodman—would occasionally perform a song on the show; and the show would almost always open with a song performed by the entire cast. * '''The Hee Haw Cowboy Quartet''' – This group, patterned after the Hee Haw Gospel Quartet, was short-lived, having formed near the end of the series' run. Like the group name suggests; the quartet, dressed in [[cowboy]] costumes, would perform a [[Western music (North America)|western song]] in the style of the [[Sons of the Pioneers]] on a [[American Old West|Western]]-style stage setting. * '''[[Clogging|Cloggers]]''' – Throughout the 1980s, several champion clogging groups would frequently appear on the show, performing their clogging routines. * '''Child singers''' – For a brief time in the late 1970s/early 1980s, child singers, mostly in the 10- to 12-year-old bracket, would occasionally appear on the show performing a popular song. Such guests included Kathy Kitchen (whom guest star [[Faron Young]] introduced), Stacy Lynn Ries, and Cheryl Handy. Lovullo also has made the claim the show presented "what were, in reality, the first musical videos."<ref name="Lovullo">Lovullo, Sam, and Mark Eliot, "Life in the Kornfield: My 25 Years at ''Hee Haw''," Boulevard Books, New York, 1996, p. 34. {{ISBN|1-57297-028-6}}</ref> Lovullo said his videos were conceptualized by having the show's staff go to nearby rural areas and film animals and farmers, before editing the footage to fit the storyline of a particular song. {{qi|The video material was a very workable production item for the show}}, he wrote. {{qi|It provided picture stories for songs. However, some of our guests felt the videos took attention away from their live performances, which they hoped would promote record sales. If they had a hit song, they didn't want to play it under comic barnyard footage.}} The concept's mixed reaction eventually spelled an end to the "video" concept on ''Hee Haw''.<ref name="Lovullo"/> However, several of co-host Owens' songs—including "Tall, Dark Stranger", "Big in Vegas", and "I Wouldn't Live in New York City (If They Gave Me the Whole Dang Town)"—aired on the series and have since aired on [[Great American Country]] and [[Country Music Television|CMT]] as part of their classic country music programming blocks.
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