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Shep Fields

Shep Fields (born Saul Feldman, September 12, 1910 – February 23, 1981) was an American bandleader who led the Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm orchestra during the 1930s. His distinctive Rippling Rhythm sound was featured on big band remote broadcasts from historic hotels nationwide and remained popular with audiences from the 1930's into the early 1960's.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Shep Fields
Shep Fields in 1957
Background information
Birth nameSaul Feldman
Born(1910-09-12)September 12, 1910
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
DiedFebruary 23, 1981(1981-02-23) (aged 70)
Los Angeles, California
GenresJazz, swing
Occupation(s)Bandleader
LabelsBluebird, MGM, RCA Victor
External audio
You may hear the Shep Fields Orchestra performing "Don't Blame Me" by Dorothy Fields/Jimmy McHugh and "Rippling Rhythm" by Sol Gice in 1948 Here

Biography Edit

Early life Edit

Shep Fields was born Saul Feldman in Brooklyn, New York, on September 12, 1910, and his mother's maiden name was Sowalski.[7] His brother, Edward Fields, was a carpet manufacturer, and his younger brother, Freddie Fields, was a respected theatrical agent and film producer who helped to establish Creative Management Associates in 1960.[8] Their father died at 39.[9]

Fields began his musical career by playing clarinet and tenor saxophone in bands during college. His "Shep Fields Jazz Orchestra" made frequent appearances at his father's resort hotel, the Queen Mountain House in the Catskill Mountains, which featured such noted singers as Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor.[10][8] Following the death of his father, Fields was forced to become his family's principal provider. Consequently, he abandoned his studies at law school and reformed his orchestra. Appearances on cruise ships and resort hotels soon followed.[11]

Career Edit

Hotels and radio Edit

In 1931, Fields received his first big break when his orchestra was booked at the famed Roseland Ballroom in New York City.[12] By 1933, he also led a band that played at Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel. In 1934, he replaced the Jack Denny Orchestra at the landmark Hotel Pierre in New York City. He soon left the Hotel Pierre to join a roadshow with the dancers Veloz and Yolanda.[12] In 1936, he was booked at Chicago's Palmer House Hotel, and the concert was broadcast live on the radio. By 1937, Fields was also featured on the NBC radio network in his own show Rippling Rhythm Revue.[13][14][15] His highly successful "Rippling Rhythm" society dance band was subsequently featured regularly on the hotel's big band remote concerts, which were transmitted over the radio to audiences throughout the country.[16]

Rippling rhythm sound Edit

Fields was eager to perfect a unique orchestral sound to distinguish his ensemble from other "sweet jazz bands" of his era. With this in mind, he collaborated with his arrangers Sal Gioa and Lou Halmy to analyze the performances of his peers. After admiring the glissandos featured by the trombone in Wayne King's orchestra, Fields adapted them to his viola section. The embellishments for the right hand, which were popularized by Eddy Duchin on the piano, became the source of inspiration for the elegant passages to which Fields assigned to his accordionist. Fields was also impressed by Hal Kemp's use of triplets on the trumpet and Ted Fio Rito's distinctive use of temple blocks. With this in mind, he incorporated the use of triplets by the clarinets, flutes, and temple blocks in his orchestra. After taking note of Ferde Grofe's innovative use of both the trombone and temple blocks in his Grand Canyon Suite, he adopted a similar stylistic device for muted trumpets. The resulting sound impressed radio listeners on the Mutual Radio Network. A contest was soon held in Chicago for fans to suggest a new name for the Fields band, in keeping with the new sound. The word "rippling" was suggested in more than one entry, and Fields came up with "Rippling Rhythm."[17]

Shep Fields soon attracted national attention, and he was subsequently invited to entertain audiences with Veloz and Yolanda at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. Confident in his success, Fields withdrew from his association with Veloz, Yolanda, and MCA Inc. He decided, instead, to return east to his former position at the Hotel Pierre in New York City. During this return trip to New York, Fields stumbled upon the distinctive sound effect that would serve as the introduction to his "Rippling Rhythm" sound for years to come.[17]

While relaxing between shows during a performance in Rockford, Illinois, Fields was seated at a soda fountain with his wife Evelyn. His attempts to develop a studio sound effect to introduce his music in Los Angeles had not been entirely successful. Struggling to find a solution for her husband, Evy began blowing bubbles into her soda through a straw. Bowing to his wife's inspiration, Fields immediately seized upon the idea and that sound became the trademark which opened each of his shows.[12][18][17] In 1937 he recorded his unique theme song for Eli Oberstein on RCA Victor's Bluebird label (Victor BS-017494, 1937) [19]

Fields' light and elegant musical style remained popular among audiences throughout the 1930s and into the 1950s.[20] Based upon his widespread popularity, Fields received a contract with Bluebird Records in 1936. His hits included "Cathedral in the Pines", "Did I Remember?", and "Thanks for the Memory". His performances at Broadway's Paramount Theater consistently broke attendance records.[21] While appearing at the posh "Star-light Roof" atop the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in 1937,[22] Fields replaced Paul Whiteman with his own radio show, The Rippling Rhythm Revue, which featured a young actor named Bob Hope as the announcer on the NBC network.[23][13][14][24] In 1938, Fields' Rippling Rhythm Orchestra and Hope were featured in his first feature-length motion picture, The Big Broadcast of 1938.[12][25] A series of live remote broadcasts of the orchestra was also transmitted at this time from the landmark Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel featuring the accordionist John Serry Sr.[26]

As the decade of the 1930's came to a close, Fields remained popular with audiences nationwide. In 1939, he appeared with his orchestra at the Academy Awards ceremony in the historic Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, California.[27]

New music and USO Edit

By 1941, Fields revamped the band into an all-reeds group, with no brass section, known as Shep Fields and His New Music, featuring vocalist Ken Curtis.[28][29] The orchestra's size was increased dramatically to embellish the results, which Paul Whiteman had recorded. Fields now presented an orchestra that blended over 35 instruments, including: one bass saxophone, one baritone saxophone, six tenor saxophones, four alto saxophones, three bass clarinets, 10 standard clarinets, and nine flutes including an alto flute and a piccolo.[30] Noted singers such as Ralph Young were also engaged. The resulting band produced a rich ensemble sound under the guidance of such arrangers as Glenn Osser, Lew Harris, and Freddy Noble, who also served as the band's musical director. The critic Leonard Feather applauded the new band's beautiful sound, and Shep embarked upon a series of USO tours to entertain the troops during World War II.[17] From February, 1943, to August, 1944, guitarist Joe Negri also worked with the band.

After World War II ended, Fields reverted to his ever popular "Rippling Rhythm" style in 1947 and continued to perform in hotels long after other bands of his era had disappeared.[17] The group disbanded in 1963,[12] and Fields moved to Houston, Texas, where he worked as a disc jockey. He later worked at Creative Management Associates with his brother Freddie Fields in Los Angeles.[12]

Death Edit

Shep Fields died on February 23, 1981, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles from a heart attack.[31][32][33] He was buried in Mount Hebron Cemetery in New York.

Legacy Edit

During the course of an artistic career, which extended from 1931 through 1963, Shep Fields compiled an extensive musical legacy that has been preserved on such record labels as: Bluebird Records, Mercury Records, MGM, and RCA Victor.[34] His discography includes over three hundred arrangements of popular songs from this era and includes such hits as: "It's De-Lovely" (1937), "I've Got You Under My Skin", "The Jersey Bounce" (1942), "Moonlight and Shadows" (Bluebird 6803), "That Old Feeling" (Bluebird 7066), and "Thanks for the Memory" (Bluebird 7318, 1938).[11][35][36] Noted musical arranger and editor Joseph Schillinger observed that over the course of his career, Shep Fields had assembled "one of the most colorful bands" of his time.[30]

Band Edit

External audio
  You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing the fox trot "In the Merry Month of May" with the accordionist John Serry Sr. in 1938 Here
  You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing "This Little Ripple Had Rhythm" in 1937 Here on archive.org

Live broadcasts Edit

Discography Edit

External audio
  You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing "September in the Rain"with the vocalist Bobby Goday in 1937 Here
  You may hear the Shep Fields Orchestra and John Serry performing "With A Smile and A Song" in 1937 Here on Archive.org
  You may hear recordings by Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra from 1936 - 1944 Here

A partial discography of Shep Fields recordings includes:[45]

  • Any Little Girl, That's a Nice Little Girl - Bluebird (B-7606-A) - Song by Fred Fisher played by Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra & accordionist John Serry (1938)
  • Cathedral In the Pines - Bluebird (B-7553-A) - Song by Charles Kenny played by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra & accordionist John Serry (1938)
  • Easy To Love - Bluebird (B-6592-A) - Song by Cole Porter played by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1936)
  • If It Rains Who Cares? - Bluebird ( B-7579-A) - Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry (1938)
  • It's De-Lovely - Montgomery Ward (M-7074-A) - Song by Cole Porter performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orcehstra (1936) [11][46]
  • In The Merry Month Of May - Bluebird (B-7606-B) - Song by Ed Haley played by the Shep Field Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry (1938)
  • I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm - Bluebird (B-6769-A) - Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra ( (1937)
  • I've Got You Under My Skin - Bluebird (B-6592-B) - Song by Cole Porter performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1936)[23]
  • Jersey Bounce - MGM (11552) - Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1953)[23][11]
  • Let's Call the Whole Thing Off- Bluebird (B-6878-B) - Song by George Gershwin & Ira Gershwin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)
  • Moonlight and Shadows - Bluebird (B-6803-A) - Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)[35]
  • Now It Can Be Told - Bluebird (B-7592-A) - Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry (1938)
  • Rippling Rhythm - Bluebird (B-6759-A) - Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1936)
  • September in The Rain - Bluebird (B-6805-A) - Song by Harry Warren performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)[23]
  • Thanks For The Memory - Bluebird (B-7318-A) - Song by Ralph Rainger performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)[35]
  • That Old Feeling - Bluebird (B-7066-A)- Song by Sammy Fain performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937) [36]
  • This Little Ripple Had Rhythm - Bluebird (B7304-B) - Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)
  • Whistle While You Work - Bluebird (B-7343-A) - Song by Frank Churchill & Larry Morey performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry (1937)
  • With A Smile and A Song - Bluebird (B-7343-B) - Song by Frank Churchill & Larry Morey performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with accordionist John Serry (1937)[47]
  • You're Laughing at Me - Bluebird (B-6769-B) - Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra (1937)

Filmography Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Campbell, Al. "That Old Feeling - Shep Fields". AllMusic. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  2. ^ "The Telegraph - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. 24 February 1981. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  3. ^ "SHEP FIELDS, LEADER OF BIG BAND KNOWEN FOR RIPPLING RYTHEM (Published 1981)". The New York Times. 24 February 1981. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  4. ^ Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound. Hoffman, Fred. 2004 Shep Fields at the Empire Room of the Palmer House Hotel on Google Books
  5. ^ America's Music Makers: Big bands and Ballrooms 1912-2011 Jack Behrens.AuthorHouse, Indiana, 2010 p. 95 Shep Fields society band broadcasting on radio from the Palmer House on Books.Google.com
  6. ^ Shep Fields Obituary - United Press International Feb. 23, 1981 on UPI.com/Archive
  7. ^ California Death Index
  8. ^ a b "Obiturary - Freddie Fields, Holywood Talent Agent, Dies at 84: Freddie Fields, brother of bandleader Shep Fields". The New York Times. December 13, 2007.
  9. ^ "Carpet King Steps Up". Milwaukee Sentinel. April 5, 1962. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
  10. ^ The New York Times -Archive, February 24, 1981 Obituary - "Shep Fields Leader of Big Band Known for Rippling Rhythm on nytimes.com
  11. ^ a b c d The New York Times -Archive, February 24, 1981 Obituary - "Shep Fields Leader of Big Band Known for Rippling Rhythm on books.google.com
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Band Leader Shep Fields Dies of Heart Attack at 70". United Press International in the Eugene Register-Guard. February 4, 1981. Retrieved 2010-05-17.
  13. ^ a b Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: the Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-19-977078-6.
  14. ^ a b Strait, Raymond (2016). "Chapter 11. Bob Hope, Shep Fields and The Rippling Rhythm Revue". Bob Hope: A Tribute. Crossroad Press.
  15. ^ Photograph of Bob Hope as master of ceremonies on the "Rippling Rhythm Revue" Show in 1937 on Gettyimages
  16. ^ America's Music Makers: Big bands and Ballrooms 1912-2011 Jack Behrens.AuthorHouse, Indiana, 2010 p. 95 Shep Fields society band on books.google.com
  17. ^ a b c d e The Big Bands - 4th Edition George T. Simon. Schirmer Trade Books, London, 2012 ISBN 978-0-85712-812-6 "Shep Fields Biography" on Books.google.com
  18. ^ "Shep Fields". Washington Post. July 12, 1957. Shep Fields admits that his wife, Evelyn, was responsible for the bubbling water through a straw sound that has identified his music for a score of years.
  19. ^ "Shep Fields Theme Song recorded for Mr. Oberstein / Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra" -Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra on the Discography of American Historical Recordings
  20. ^ America's Music Makers: Big bands and Ballrooms 1912-2011 Jack Behrens.AuthorHouse, Indiana, 2010 p. 27 Shep Fields band popular from the 1930s to the 1950s on books.google.com
  21. ^ The Telegraph -Obituraries: Shep Fields - noted bandleader February 24, 1981 "Shep Fields and Paramount Theater" on books.google.com
  22. ^ The Telegraph - Obituaries: Shep Fields Dies -noted bandleader February 24, 1981 "Shep Fields and Waldorf Astoria Hotel" on books.google.com
  23. ^ a b c d "Shep Fields dies, noted bandleader". Associated Press in The Telegraph. February 24, 1981. Retrieved 2010-05-17. Bandleader Shep Fields who recorded "The Jersey Bounce" ...
  24. ^ Photograph of Bob Hope as master of ceremonies on the "Rippling Rhythm Revue" Show in 1937 on Gettyimages
  25. ^ a b Stanley Green and Elaine Schmidt (2000). Hollywood musicals year by year. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 0-634-00765-3. To justify the movie's title — and the inclusion in the cast of such diverse talents as Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm, ...
  26. ^ a b The Los Angeles Examiner, October 9, 1938, pg. 1
  27. ^ Shep Fields Obituary - United Press International Feb. 23, 1981 on UPI.com/Archive
  28. ^ a b c d e "Shep Fields Makes Decided Hit Here With New Rhythm". Ottawa Citizen. August 26, 1941. Retrieved 2010-05-16.
  29. ^ . Time. November 4, 1941. Archived from the original on September 3, 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-17. Dedicator was Bandleader Shep Fields, who lately gave up his trade-mark "Rippling Rhythm," threw out his brass, concentrated on nine saxophones.
  30. ^ a b The Big Bands - 4th Edition George T. Simon. Schirmer Trade Books, London, 2012 ISBN 978-0-85712-812-6"Shep Fields Biography" on Books.google.com
  31. ^ "Shep Fields, Leader Of Big Band Known For Rippling Rhythm". New York Times. February 24, 1981. Retrieved 2008-06-23. Shep Fields, the band leader who made his fame and fortune in the 1930s and '40s with a unique sound he called Rippling Rhythm, died of a heart attack yesterday in Los Angeles. He was 70 years old. Mr. Fields developed the Rippling Rhythm sound in 1936 when he ...
  32. ^ "Shep Fields Dies. Was Bandleader". United Press International in Hartford Courant. February 24, 1981. Bandleader Shep Fields, who rose to fame in the big band era with an orchestra that opened its performances with a sound called Rippling Rhythm, died Monday of a heart attack. He was 70.
  33. ^ . Time. March 9, 1981. Archived from the original on October 15, 2010. Retrieved 2008-06-23. Shep Fields, 70, bandleader who was known during the 1930s and '40s for his Rippling Rhythm, a bubbly blend of light, catchy orchestrations and the sound made by blowing through a straw into a bowl of water near the microphone; of a heart attack; in Los Angeles.
  34. ^ Shep Fields recordings on archive.org
  35. ^ a b c Tin Pan Alley: An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song David A. Jasen. Routledge, New York, 2003 p. 336-337 ISBN 0-415-93877-5 Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm 1938, Moonlight and Shadows hit song and Thanks for the Memory on books.google.com
  36. ^ a b Tin Pan Alley: An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song David A. Jasen. Routledge, New York, 2003 p. 55 ISBN 0-415-93877-5 Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm 1938, That Old Feeling on books.google.com
  37. ^ Brian Arthur Lovell Rust (1975). The American Dance Band Discography 1917-1942. ISBN 0-87000-248-1.
  38. ^ "Musician, arranger Lou Halmy dies at 93". The Register-Guard. March 22, 2005. Retrieved 2010-05-16. Halmy was born in Budapest, Hungary, and his family immigrated to the United States when he was 2. He made his mark as a trumpet player with East Coast outfits including Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra, a society band that played on The Woodbury Hour With Bob Hope and in The Big Broadcast of 1938, a film starring Hope, W.C. Fields and Dorothy Lamour.
  39. ^ "Great Depression a gold mine for musicians". The Register-Guard. February 15, 2002. Retrieved 2010-05-16. When trumpet star and jazz arranger Lou Halmy looks back on the Great Depression of the 1930s, it doesn't seem depressing at all. 'I was lucky,' the 91-year-old Eugene musician says. 'I was playing with a band and working all the time. We had a steady job, which was the rarest thing in music.' While many people were standing in bread lines and living in shanty camps, Halmy was inside New York's posh Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, cheering people up by playing his horn in one of the most popular dance bands of the era: Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm ...
  40. ^ . Museum of Broadcast Communications. Archived from the original on 2010-05-11. Retrieved 2010-05-19. He studied saxophone at Juilliard, and later played with nationally famous bands (Charlie Spivak, Claude Thornhill, Shep Fields, Art Mooney).
  41. ^ Brennan, Patricia (August 11, 2002). "Sid Caesar, whose name is s ..." Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-05-16. Sid Caesar ... He went on to play in a series of big bands, including those of Claude Thornhill, Charlie Spivak, Shep Fields, Art Mooney and Benny Goodman. ...
  42. ^ The American Dance Band Discography 1917-1942 Volume 1. Rust, Brian. Arlington House Publishers, New Rochelle, New York, 1975, Pg. 516-517 ISBN 0-87000-248-1
  43. ^ Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound. Hoffman, Fred. 2004 Shep Fields at the Empire Room of the Palmer House Hotel on Google Books
  44. ^ America's Music Makers: Big bands and Ballrooms 1912-2011 Jack Behrens.AuthorHouse, Indiana, 2010 p. 95 Shep Fields society band broadcasting on radio from the Palmer House on Books.Google.com
  45. ^ Shep Fields' recordings on archive.org
  46. ^ "It's De-Lovely" performed by Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra on Archive.org
  47. ^ With a Smile and a Song & the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchesatra on Archive.org

Further reading Edit

  • Washington Post; February 7, 1937 "Shep Fields in Town Wednesday for Dance."
  • Washington Post; May 8, 1937 "'Wings of the Morning,' in Technicolor, And Shep Fields Share Honors at Earle. Racing Picture and Ace Band Divide Top Spots on Bill of General Appeal."
  • Washington Post; January 17, 1939 "Los Angeles, January 16, 1939 (United Press) Mrs. Myra Wallace, wife of a music publisher, learned tonight the $10,000 banknote which she tossed to Shep Fields, orchestra leader, for playing one her favorite numbers might be legal -- not stage money as she had thought."

External links Edit

shep, fields, born, saul, feldman, september, 1910, february, 1981, american, bandleader, rippling, rhythm, orchestra, during, 1930s, distinctive, rippling, rhythm, sound, featured, band, remote, broadcasts, from, historic, hotels, nationwide, remained, popula. Shep Fields born Saul Feldman September 12 1910 February 23 1981 was an American bandleader who led the Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm orchestra during the 1930s His distinctive Rippling Rhythm sound was featured on big band remote broadcasts from historic hotels nationwide and remained popular with audiences from the 1930 s into the early 1960 s 1 2 3 4 5 6 Shep FieldsShep Fields in 1957Background informationBirth nameSaul FeldmanBorn 1910 09 12 September 12 1910Brooklyn New York U S DiedFebruary 23 1981 1981 02 23 aged 70 Los Angeles CaliforniaGenresJazz swingOccupation s BandleaderLabelsBluebird MGM RCA Victor External audioYou may hear the Shep Fields Orchestra performing Don t Blame Me by Dorothy Fields Jimmy McHugh and Rippling Rhythm by Sol Gice in 1948 Here Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Career 1 2 1 Hotels and radio 1 2 2 Rippling rhythm sound 1 2 3 New music and USO 1 3 Death 1 4 Legacy 2 Band 3 Live broadcasts 4 Discography 5 Filmography 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Shep Fields was born Saul Feldman in Brooklyn New York on September 12 1910 and his mother s maiden name was Sowalski 7 His brother Edward Fields was a carpet manufacturer and his younger brother Freddie Fields was a respected theatrical agent and film producer who helped to establish Creative Management Associates in 1960 8 Their father died at 39 9 Fields began his musical career by playing clarinet and tenor saxophone in bands during college His Shep Fields Jazz Orchestra made frequent appearances at his father s resort hotel the Queen Mountain House in the Catskill Mountains which featured such noted singers as Al Jolson and Eddie Cantor 10 8 Following the death of his father Fields was forced to become his family s principal provider Consequently he abandoned his studies at law school and reformed his orchestra Appearances on cruise ships and resort hotels soon followed 11 Career Edit Hotels and radio Edit In 1931 Fields received his first big break when his orchestra was booked at the famed Roseland Ballroom in New York City 12 By 1933 he also led a band that played at Grossinger s Catskill Resort Hotel In 1934 he replaced the Jack Denny Orchestra at the landmark Hotel Pierre in New York City He soon left the Hotel Pierre to join a roadshow with the dancers Veloz and Yolanda 12 In 1936 he was booked at Chicago s Palmer House Hotel and the concert was broadcast live on the radio By 1937 Fields was also featured on the NBC radio network in his own show Rippling Rhythm Revue 13 14 15 His highly successful Rippling Rhythm society dance band was subsequently featured regularly on the hotel s big band remote concerts which were transmitted over the radio to audiences throughout the country 16 Rippling rhythm sound Edit Fields was eager to perfect a unique orchestral sound to distinguish his ensemble from other sweet jazz bands of his era With this in mind he collaborated with his arrangers Sal Gioa and Lou Halmy to analyze the performances of his peers After admiring the glissandos featured by the trombone in Wayne King s orchestra Fields adapted them to his viola section The embellishments for the right hand which were popularized by Eddy Duchin on the piano became the source of inspiration for the elegant passages to which Fields assigned to his accordionist Fields was also impressed by Hal Kemp s use of triplets on the trumpet and Ted Fio Rito s distinctive use of temple blocks With this in mind he incorporated the use of triplets by the clarinets flutes and temple blocks in his orchestra After taking note of Ferde Grofe s innovative use of both the trombone and temple blocks in his Grand Canyon Suite he adopted a similar stylistic device for muted trumpets The resulting sound impressed radio listeners on the Mutual Radio Network A contest was soon held in Chicago for fans to suggest a new name for the Fields band in keeping with the new sound The word rippling was suggested in more than one entry and Fields came up with Rippling Rhythm 17 Shep Fields soon attracted national attention and he was subsequently invited to entertain audiences with Veloz and Yolanda at the Cocoanut Grove nightclub at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles Confident in his success Fields withdrew from his association with Veloz Yolanda and MCA Inc He decided instead to return east to his former position at the Hotel Pierre in New York City During this return trip to New York Fields stumbled upon the distinctive sound effect that would serve as the introduction to his Rippling Rhythm sound for years to come 17 While relaxing between shows during a performance in Rockford Illinois Fields was seated at a soda fountain with his wife Evelyn His attempts to develop a studio sound effect to introduce his music in Los Angeles had not been entirely successful Struggling to find a solution for her husband Evy began blowing bubbles into her soda through a straw Bowing to his wife s inspiration Fields immediately seized upon the idea and that sound became the trademark which opened each of his shows 12 18 17 In 1937 he recorded his unique theme song for Eli Oberstein on RCA Victor s Bluebird label Victor BS 017494 1937 19 Fields light and elegant musical style remained popular among audiences throughout the 1930s and into the 1950s 20 Based upon his widespread popularity Fields received a contract with Bluebird Records in 1936 His hits included Cathedral in the Pines Did I Remember and Thanks for the Memory His performances at Broadway s Paramount Theater consistently broke attendance records 21 While appearing at the posh Star light Roof atop the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in 1937 22 Fields replaced Paul Whiteman with his own radio show The Rippling Rhythm Revue which featured a young actor named Bob Hope as the announcer on the NBC network 23 13 14 24 In 1938 Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra and Hope were featured in his first feature length motion picture The Big Broadcast of 1938 12 25 A series of live remote broadcasts of the orchestra was also transmitted at this time from the landmark Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel featuring the accordionist John Serry Sr 26 As the decade of the 1930 s came to a close Fields remained popular with audiences nationwide In 1939 he appeared with his orchestra at the Academy Awards ceremony in the historic Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles California 27 New music and USO Edit By 1941 Fields revamped the band into an all reeds group with no brass section known as Shep Fields and His New Music featuring vocalist Ken Curtis 28 29 The orchestra s size was increased dramatically to embellish the results which Paul Whiteman had recorded Fields now presented an orchestra that blended over 35 instruments including one bass saxophone one baritone saxophone six tenor saxophones four alto saxophones three bass clarinets 10 standard clarinets and nine flutes including an alto flute and a piccolo 30 Noted singers such as Ralph Young were also engaged The resulting band produced a rich ensemble sound under the guidance of such arrangers as Glenn Osser Lew Harris and Freddy Noble who also served as the band s musical director The critic Leonard Feather applauded the new band s beautiful sound and Shep embarked upon a series of USO tours to entertain the troops during World War II 17 From February 1943 to August 1944 guitarist Joe Negri also worked with the band After World War II ended Fields reverted to his ever popular Rippling Rhythm style in 1947 and continued to perform in hotels long after other bands of his era had disappeared 17 The group disbanded in 1963 12 and Fields moved to Houston Texas where he worked as a disc jockey He later worked at Creative Management Associates with his brother Freddie Fields in Los Angeles 12 Death Edit Shep Fields died on February 23 1981 at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles from a heart attack 31 32 33 He was buried in Mount Hebron Cemetery in New York Legacy Edit During the course of an artistic career which extended from 1931 through 1963 Shep Fields compiled an extensive musical legacy that has been preserved on such record labels as Bluebird Records Mercury Records MGM and RCA Victor 34 His discography includes over three hundred arrangements of popular songs from this era and includes such hits as It s De Lovely 1937 I ve Got You Under My Skin The Jersey Bounce 1942 Moonlight and Shadows Bluebird 6803 That Old Feeling Bluebird 7066 and Thanks for the Memory Bluebird 7318 1938 11 35 36 Noted musical arranger and editor Joseph Schillinger observed that over the course of his career Shep Fields had assembled one of the most colorful bands of his time 30 Band EditExternal audio nbsp You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing the fox trot In the Merry Month of May with the accordionist John Serry Sr in 1938 Here nbsp You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing This Little Ripple Had Rhythm in 1937 Here on archive orgGene Merlino vocals 1928 Sid Greene 1908 2006 drums and percussion band manager 1932 1943 Hal Derwin vocals 1940 Larry Neill vocals 1940 Dorothy Allen 1896 1970 vocals 1940 28 Ken Curtis vocals 1942 1949 Joe Negri 1926 guitar The Three Beaus and a Peep vocals circa 1947 1948 Bob Johnstone 1916 1994 singer circa 1947 1948 Toni Arden singer circa 1945 Bob Shapley accordion circa 1948 1950 Carl Frederick Tandberg 1910 1988 bass fiddle circa 1940 37 Lou Halmy 1911 2005 trumpet music arranger circa 1935 38 39 Sid Caesar 1922 2014 saxophone circa 1940 40 41 John Serry Sr 1915 2003 accordion 1937 1938 42 Pat Foy singer 1941 28 Lew Harris music arranger 1940 28 Earl Kramer bass saxophone 1941 28 John Quara 1925 guitar circa 1947 1950Live broadcasts EditPalmer House Hotel Empire Room in Chicago during the late 1930 s 43 44 Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles during September 1938 October 1938 with John Serry Sr as featured soloist on the NBC radio network 26 Glen Island Casino in New Rochelle New York on May 12 1947 with Toni Arden Bob Johnstone and The Three Beaus and a Peep Ice Terrace Room of the New Yorker Hotel on March 6 1948 with Toni Arden Bob Johnstone and The Three Beaus and a PeepDiscography EditExternal audio nbsp You may hear the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra performing September in the Rain with the vocalist Bobby Goday in 1937 Here nbsp You may hear the Shep Fields Orchestra and John Serry performing With A Smile and A Song in 1937 Here on Archive org nbsp You may hear recordings by Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra from 1936 1944 HereA partial discography of Shep Fields recordings includes 45 Any Little Girl That s a Nice Little Girl Bluebird B 7606 A Song by Fred Fisher played by Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra amp accordionist John Serry 1938 Cathedral In the Pines Bluebird B 7553 A Song by Charles Kenny played by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra amp accordionist John Serry 1938 Easy To Love Bluebird B 6592 A Song by Cole Porter played by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1936 If It Rains Who Cares Bluebird B 7579 A Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry 1938 It s De Lovely Montgomery Ward M 7074 A Song by Cole Porter performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orcehstra 1936 11 46 In The Merry Month Of May Bluebird B 7606 B Song by Ed Haley played by the Shep Field Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry 1938 I ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm Bluebird B 6769 A Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 I ve Got You Under My Skin Bluebird B 6592 B Song by Cole Porter performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1936 23 Jersey Bounce MGM 11552 Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1953 23 11 Let s Call the Whole Thing Off Bluebird B 6878 B Song by George Gershwin amp Ira Gershwin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 Moonlight and Shadows Bluebird B 6803 A Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 35 Now It Can Be Told Bluebird B 7592 A Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry 1938 Rippling Rhythm Bluebird B 6759 A Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1936 September in The Rain Bluebird B 6805 A Song by Harry Warren performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 23 Thanks For The Memory Bluebird B 7318 A Song by Ralph Rainger performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 35 That Old Feeling Bluebird B 7066 A Song by Sammy Fain performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 36 This Little Ripple Had Rhythm Bluebird B7304 B Song performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 Whistle While You Work Bluebird B 7343 A Song by Frank Churchill amp Larry Morey performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with the accordionist John Serry 1937 With A Smile and A Song Bluebird B 7343 B Song by Frank Churchill amp Larry Morey performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra with accordionist John Serry 1937 47 You re Laughing at Me Bluebird B 6769 B Song by Irving Berlin performed by the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 1937 Filmography EditVarious Soundies 1941 1946 You Came To My Rescue 1937 director Dave Fleischer The Big Broadcast of 1938 1938 director Mitchell Leisen with W C Fields Martha Raye Dorothy Lamour and Bob Hope 25 Kreisler Bandstand 1951 TV series director Perry Lafferty Handle with Care 1977 film Citizens Band executive producerReferences Edit Campbell Al That Old Feeling Shep Fields AllMusic Retrieved 28 October 2020 The Telegraph Google News Archive Search news google com 24 February 1981 Retrieved 28 October 2020 SHEP FIELDS LEADER OF BIG BAND KNOWEN FOR RIPPLING RYTHEM Published 1981 The New York Times 24 February 1981 Retrieved 28 October 2020 Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound Hoffman Fred 2004 Shep Fields at the Empire Room of the Palmer House Hotel on Google Books America s Music Makers Big bands and Ballrooms 1912 2011 Jack Behrens AuthorHouse Indiana 2010 p 95 Shep Fields society band broadcasting on radio from the Palmer House on Books Google com Shep Fields Obituary United Press International Feb 23 1981 on UPI com Archive California Death Index a b Obiturary Freddie Fields Holywood Talent Agent Dies at 84 Freddie Fields brother of bandleader Shep Fields The New York Times December 13 2007 Carpet King Steps Up Milwaukee Sentinel April 5 1962 Retrieved 2010 05 16 The New York Times Archive February 24 1981 Obituary Shep Fields Leader of Big Band Known for Rippling Rhythm on nytimes com a b c d The New York Times Archive February 24 1981 Obituary Shep Fields Leader of Big Band Known for Rippling Rhythm on books google com a b c d e f Band Leader Shep Fields Dies of Heart Attack at 70 United Press International in the Eugene Register Guard February 4 1981 Retrieved 2010 05 17 a b Dunning John 1998 On the Air the Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio New York Oxford University Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 19 977078 6 a b Strait Raymond 2016 Chapter 11 Bob Hope Shep Fields and The Rippling Rhythm Revue Bob Hope A Tribute Crossroad Press Photograph of Bob Hope as master of ceremonies on the Rippling Rhythm Revue Show in 1937 on Gettyimages America s Music Makers Big bands and Ballrooms 1912 2011 Jack Behrens AuthorHouse Indiana 2010 p 95 Shep Fields society band on books google com a b c d e The Big Bands 4th Edition George T Simon Schirmer Trade Books London 2012 ISBN 978 0 85712 812 6 Shep Fields Biography on Books google com Shep Fields Washington Post July 12 1957 Shep Fields admits that his wife Evelyn was responsible for the bubbling water through a straw sound that has identified his music for a score of years Shep Fields Theme Song recorded for Mr Oberstein Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra on the Discography of American Historical Recordings America s Music Makers Big bands and Ballrooms 1912 2011 Jack Behrens AuthorHouse Indiana 2010 p 27 Shep Fields band popular from the 1930s to the 1950s on books google com The Telegraph Obituraries Shep Fields noted bandleader February 24 1981 Shep Fields and Paramount Theater on books google com The Telegraph Obituaries Shep Fields Dies noted bandleader February 24 1981 Shep Fields and Waldorf Astoria Hotel on books google com a b c d Shep Fields dies noted bandleader Associated Press in The Telegraph February 24 1981 Retrieved 2010 05 17 Bandleader Shep Fields who recorded The Jersey Bounce Photograph of Bob Hope as master of ceremonies on the Rippling Rhythm Revue Show in 1937 on Gettyimages a b Stanley Green and Elaine Schmidt 2000 Hollywood musicals year by year Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 0 634 00765 3 To justify the movie s title and the inclusion in the cast of such diverse talents as Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm a b The Los Angeles Examiner October 9 1938 pg 1 Shep Fields Obituary United Press International Feb 23 1981 on UPI com Archive a b c d e Shep Fields Makes Decided Hit Here With New Rhythm Ottawa Citizen August 26 1941 Retrieved 2010 05 16 Patriotic Notes Time November 4 1941 Archived from the original on September 3 2010 Retrieved 2010 05 17 Dedicator was Bandleader Shep Fields who lately gave up his trade mark Rippling Rhythm threw out his brass concentrated on nine saxophones a b The Big Bands 4th Edition George T Simon Schirmer Trade Books London 2012 ISBN 978 0 85712 812 6 Shep Fields Biography on Books google com Shep Fields Leader Of Big Band Known For Rippling Rhythm New York Times February 24 1981 Retrieved 2008 06 23 Shep Fields the band leader who made his fame and fortune in the 1930s and 40s with a unique sound he called Rippling Rhythm died of a heart attack yesterday in Los Angeles He was 70 years old Mr Fields developed the Rippling Rhythm sound in 1936 when he Shep Fields Dies Was Bandleader United Press International in Hartford Courant February 24 1981 Bandleader Shep Fields who rose to fame in the big band era with an orchestra that opened its performances with a sound called Rippling Rhythm died Monday of a heart attack He was 70 Died Time March 9 1981 Archived from the original on October 15 2010 Retrieved 2008 06 23 Shep Fields 70 bandleader who was known during the 1930s and 40s for his Rippling Rhythm a bubbly blend of light catchy orchestrations and the sound made by blowing through a straw into a bowl of water near the microphone of a heart attack in Los Angeles Shep Fields recordings on archive org a b c Tin Pan Alley An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song David A Jasen Routledge New York 2003 p 336 337 ISBN 0 415 93877 5 Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm 1938 Moonlight and Shadows hit song and Thanks for the Memory on books google com a b Tin Pan Alley An Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song David A Jasen Routledge New York 2003 p 55 ISBN 0 415 93877 5 Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm 1938 That Old Feeling on books google com Brian Arthur Lovell Rust 1975 The American Dance Band Discography 1917 1942 ISBN 0 87000 248 1 Musician arranger Lou Halmy dies at 93 The Register Guard March 22 2005 Retrieved 2010 05 16 Halmy was born in Budapest Hungary and his family immigrated to the United States when he was 2 He made his mark as a trumpet player with East Coast outfits including Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra a society band that played on The Woodbury Hour With Bob Hope and in The Big Broadcast of 1938 a film starring Hope W C Fields and Dorothy Lamour Great Depression a gold mine for musicians The Register Guard February 15 2002 Retrieved 2010 05 16 When trumpet star and jazz arranger Lou Halmy looks back on the Great Depression of the 1930s it doesn t seem depressing at all I was lucky the 91 year old Eugene musician says I was playing with a band and working all the time We had a steady job which was the rarest thing in music While many people were standing in bread lines and living in shanty camps Halmy was inside New York s posh Waldorf Astoria Hotel cheering people up by playing his horn in one of the most popular dance bands of the era Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Sid Caesar Museum of Broadcast Communications Archived from the original on 2010 05 11 Retrieved 2010 05 19 He studied saxophone at Juilliard and later played with nationally famous bands Charlie Spivak Claude Thornhill Shep Fields Art Mooney Brennan Patricia August 11 2002 Sid Caesar whose name is s Washington Post Retrieved 2010 05 16 Sid Caesar He went on to play in a series of big bands including those of Claude Thornhill Charlie Spivak Shep Fields Art Mooney and Benny Goodman The American Dance Band Discography 1917 1942 Volume 1 Rust Brian Arlington House Publishers New Rochelle New York 1975 Pg 516 517 ISBN 0 87000 248 1 Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound Hoffman Fred 2004 Shep Fields at the Empire Room of the Palmer House Hotel on Google Books America s Music Makers Big bands and Ballrooms 1912 2011 Jack Behrens AuthorHouse Indiana 2010 p 95 Shep Fields society band broadcasting on radio from the Palmer House on Books Google com Shep Fields recordings on archive org It s De Lovely performed by Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra on Archive org With a Smile and a Song amp the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchesatra on Archive orgFurther reading EditWashington Post February 7 1937 Shep Fields in Town Wednesday for Dance Washington Post May 8 1937 Wings of the Morning in Technicolor And Shep Fields Share Honors at Earle Racing Picture and Ace Band Divide Top Spots on Bill of General Appeal Washington Post January 17 1939 Los Angeles January 16 1939 United Press Mrs Myra Wallace wife of a music publisher learned tonight the 10 000 banknote which she tossed to Shep Fields orchestra leader for playing one her favorite numbers might be legal not stage money as she had thought External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shep Fields Shep Fields Orchestra performing in record albums on Archive org Shep Fields on www worldcat org Shep Fields on The Library of Congress Online catalog loc gov Shep Fields at Find a Grave Shep Fields recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shep Fields amp oldid 1176318277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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