Yesterday we were enjoying the distinctive sounds of Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra, but Shep had another highly distinctive ensemble during the Big Band Era - one that sounded like nothing else on the airwaves...
Welcome to Shep Fields and His New Music!
The Brass-Less Experiment
Formed in 1941, this band wasn’t just different from
the Rippling Rhythm outfit - it was different from everybody. Shep built
an all‑reed orchestra, thirty‑something saxes and woodwinds with no
brass at all! In an era defined by trumpets and trombones, this was a bold,
almost futuristic experiment.
Pretty cool, right?
From the Bandstand to Dodge City
Flip that Bluebird record over and you get a taste of how
the band handled ballads, with Ken Curtis singing Long May We Love:
Ken Curtis, of course, would gain his greatest fame years
later as "Festus" on the long‑running TV western Gunsmoke
(appearing from 1959–1975). It used to be enough of a surprise to tell people that Festus had
once been a handsome crooner - you’d just mention that he sang (briefly) with Tommy
Dorsey (after leaving Shep’s band). Now you practically have to explain Gunsmoke,
Festus, Ken Curtis, and Tommy Dorsey before you can even
get back to Shep Fields.
Similarly, try dropping into casual conversation that Sid Caesar once played sax in Shep Fields’ all‑reed band. Watch the blank stares roll in.
In any event, Ken shows off his comic timing on Shep’s 1942
Bluebird recording of Breathless:
Lots of fun!
The Canary Connection
Another shift with the New Music band was Shep’s increased use of female vocalists - or, as I like to say, canaries. Here’s ace canary Meredith Blake singing the wonderful Frank Loesser/Jimmy McHugh song Let’s Get Lost from a 1943 broadcast:
Shep didn’t get the chance to record this song commercially, as the recording ban was in effect at the time, but we’re fortunate to have radio airchecks, V‑Discs, and transcription recordings to help fill in some of the gaps.
Meredith was still with the band in late 1944 when the ban was lifted, and she provides a lovely vocal on “Sweet Dreams, Sweetheart,” from the Warner Brothers picture Hollywood Canteen.
I like that song a lot. Is it because I have a total retro‑crush on the idealized version of Joan Leslie from that movie? Possibly...
Return of the Ripple
But the ways of show business being what they are, Shep eventually found that there was more demand for his Rippling Rhythm style in the leaner post‑war big‑band market, so he returned to that sound.
Even so, his New Music band left behind some genuinely fascinating records —
and if nothing else, it proves that Shep Fields had one of the most unusual
and adventurous career arcs of the entire era!
Brass or no brass - what’s your take?
Let me know; look for me down another Shep‑Fields‑shaped rabbit hole!






























