Hello all! A couple of days ago a video clip originated on Facebook containing the Ray Stevens performances from an episode of
Hee Haw in 1976. The clip didn't originate on YouTube and it's one of those auto-play video clips where it begins playing as soon as it appears on your screen. I don't like embedding those kinds of video clips on my blog page and so I decided to just provide a link to the video clip. You can watch Ray Stevens perform two of his hit songs, "
Honky Tonk Waltz" and "
You Are So Beautiful", when you click
HERE. Those two songs come from his 1976 Warner Brothers album,
Just For the Record.
The video clip begins with Ray and
Hee Haw cast member Jimmy Riddle. In this brief routine Ray sneaks up and surprises a startled Jimmy...who naturally reacts in hysterics...much to the delight of a laughing Ray Stevens. The two perform the classic
eef and hambone routine usually performed on the show by Jimmy and Jackie Phelps who were billed as 'Riddle and Phelps' in the earliest years of
Hee Haw.
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Ray Stevens and Jimmy Riddle; 1976 |
Attempting to get a screen cap as Ray and Jimmy are doing the hambone routine can be difficult. Given the tempo of Ray's leg slaps it causes the right hand to look unfocused/blurry. Jimmy is in the process of eefing and making music with his hands. A photo posted further down the blog entry of the two of them from 1980 also features some blurry imagery during the hambone routine.
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Ray Stevens; 1976 |
In the screen cap off to the left we have Ray Stevens immersed into his performance of "
Honky Tonk Waltz". The song comes from the pen of songwriter Paul Craft. The Facebook video clip becomes only the second on-line video to feature Ray performing this song. There's another video clip from his appearance on an episode of
Pop! Goes the Country and in that performance he plays both a guitar and the piano...and midway through the performance he dances briefly with Donna Fargo before being comically interrupted by host, Ralph Emery. In this performance from
Hee Haw it is much more subdued and as you can see it's performed with a more serious flair. The song is a clever blend of two different styles of music. There's the honky tonk aspect and then there's the dance aspect of a waltz. The lead instrument is the mandolin followed closely behind by the fiddle. In the video clip the mandolin player is given screen time along side Ray. I've mentioned on social media sites that I think the mandolin player is Larry Sasser...and my assumption appears to be correct because in the second performance, "
You Are So Beautiful", the same musician is playing the steel guitar. If my recollection is correct I believe Larry Sasser was part of Ray's touring band for a number of years...but not a lengthy member of his studio band. I think Larry played on just a couple of Ray's albums and those were in the 1980s. Larry appears as the steel guitar player during a performance of "
Sunshine" that Ray taped for the Jerry Reed and Tom Selleck movie,
Concrete Cowboys. I'll go back and edit this blog entry if I find out the identity of the mysterious mandolin/steel guitar player from the 1976 episode of
Hee Haw...but I say it's Larry Sasser. In the meantime, "
Honky Tonk Waltz" hit the Country chart on August 7, 1976 and remained charted for 10 weeks. It reached it's peak position in the Country Top-30 during it's 7th chart week on September 18, 1976. It appeared on the Country chart for it's 10th and final week on October 9, 1976. This episode of
Hee Haw originally aired October 23, 1976. The footage was taped in the summer of 1976...right around the time "
You Are So Beautiful" was his current release.
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Ray Stevens and a couple of his musicians; 1976 |
"
You Are So Beautiful" happened to be the debut single on Warner Brothers from Ray Stevens. He had recently left Barnaby Records after a 5 year run and his first single for Warner Brothers hit the Country chart on May 1, 1976. It reached it's Top-20 peak in it's 9th chart week on June 26, 1976 and remained on the chart until July 24, 1976. The single was arranged in a Bluegrass style similar to "
Misty" from a year earlier. Whereas "
Misty" was mid-tempo and the steel guitar, banjo, and fiddle were prominent "
You Are So Beautiful" pushed for a more up-tempo delivery and an even heavier use of those instruments. In both songs there's an interlude where the musicians take center stage. In the performance of "
You Are So Beautiful" both the steel guitar and fiddle player are on screen. The fiddle player is Lisa Silver. There's a brief routine with George Lindsey in this 1976 episode, too.
Author Update: 3/30/2020: ***I titled this blog using the year 1977 because I was using my eyes instead of going through my stats. I thought this episode originally aired in early 1977 and featured footage from a fall 1976 taping session. However, I decided to refresh my memory and I looked through my personal notes regarding Ray's career and found out this episode aired on October 23, 1976. This means the footage was taped in the summer of 1976, rather than the fall of 1976 as I originally thought. I've corrected the year, from 1977 to 1976, within the text of this blog entry and in the photo captions but I'm leaving the title of this blog entry as is. It's episode six of the 1976-1977 season of
Hee Haw.***
I created a couple of photo comparisons earlier. Ray Stevens, in a 1980 appearance on
Hee Haw, performed a hambone routine with Jimmy Riddle just as they had in the 1976 appearance. By this point Ray had grown a beard once again but unlike in years past he's kept the beard and it's become such a part of his look...I don't believe he's ever been clean shaven since the first half of 1978. In Ray's 1980 appearance on
Hee Haw both Lisa Silver and Larry Sasser are part of the band. Here are the photos...
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Ray Stevens and Jimmy Riddle; 1976 and 1980 |
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Ray Stevens and Jimmy Riddle; 1980 and 1976 |
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Ray Stevens and Jimmy Riddle; 1980 |
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