Buffalo Bills (quartet)

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The Buffalo Bills were a barbershop quartet formed in Buffalo, New York. In 1950, they won the Barbershop Harmony Society International Quartet Contest, earning them the title of International Quartet Champions.

The quartet is one of the most famous quartets in the history of barbershop, primarily because of its involvement in Meredith Willson's The Music Man. In the musical Vern Reed sang tenor, Al Shea lead, Wayne "Scotty" Ward baritone, and Bill Spangenberg bass. The Bills included seven singers over their twenty year run; personnel changes are fairly common in barbershop quartets. The Bills went through three periods of performance levels beginning with that of the competition/show quartet, then as Broadway stage performers, and finally as professional nightclub entertainers.

They were the first quartet in the role of the school board when the musical opened in 1957, logging more than 1,500 performances on Broadway. They also appeared as the quartet in the 1962 feature film adaptation. For the next five years, the Bills performed on the Arthur Godfrey Show as a nightclub act, as guest performers in productions of The Music Man and as headline entertainers on barbershop shows as well as county and state fairs around North America. Their final performance in 1967 capped a career of more than 4,500 performances.


Preceded by
Mid States Four
SPEBSQSA International Quartet Champions
1950
Succeeded by
Schmitt Brothers