Commercial Man SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Over 46 years, you've heard hundreds of tunes by advertising composer Artie Fields. rtie Fields started his mu- sic career playing the trumpet, but last month he did not have to think about tooting his own horn. The Michigan Chapter of the Na- tional Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS) took care of that. Mr. Fields was among 11 tele- vision pioneers presented with a Silver Circle Award, which recognizes professionals who be- gan their careers at least 25 years ago and who have made significant contributions to Michigan. NATAS honored Mr. Fields, a 46-year veteran, as a produc- er, composer and arranger. His melodies and/or orchestra- tions for com- mercials sup- ported programs such as "Bo- nanza," "Route 66," 'Wide, Wide World" and "The Dinah Shore Show." All-told, he estimates working on 9,000 music commercials in- cluding the more recent "Let's Go Krogering," which has his music. During the busiest times in his career, he employed a 22- mem- ber staff. "Up until I got involved, no one in Detroit had done that kind of work in any volume at all," said Mr. Fields, 72, who continues to ply his craft at his Southfield stu- dio, Artie Fields Productions. "Over the years, we generated more than $20 million in session fees and residuals for Detroit mu- sicians, announcers and actors, with most of the recording done in the city. "We were doing five, six, sev- en commercials a week — net- work and regional. I worked for all of the agencies and almost every automobile." Currently, Mr. Fields is in- volved with two projects. He is expanding the 60-city, TV syn- dication of "The Best of the Class," a salute to graduating high school seniors originally aired on Channel 7, and he is working on the music for a New Hampshire talk show. It was a live TV show in Michi- gan that steered him toward his commercial music pursuits. "I had my own band for many years, and I used to write for many of the acts that appeared with us," Mr. Fields said about his employment in the late '40s. "There was a club in town called was Bowery, and I w as the house conductor. We had all the big stars who came to this area. "One of the fel- lows I used to work with was comic Jackie Cannon. He got a Channel 7 live TV show, and I had the band. He suggested that I go Artie Fields: 46 years of jingles. down to (W.B.) Doner's and talk to them because they were spon- soring him. "I went down there, left a demo and six months later they called me. It was a day-and-night commitment after that." Mr. Fields' produced, com- posed and wrote lyrics for his ear- ly clients, Speedway and Faygo. Just a few of the clients that came along after that were Pills- bury, H & R Block, Westing- house and Solarcaine. "I was particularly fascinated with film because I had done a lot of writing for dancers," said Mr. Fields, whose musical edu- His music saved an agency. cation came through attending public schools in Detroit. "You write your music to cue with the dancers' movements or the other way around, so looking at film was very similar to writ- ing for live motion." Because of the stature of his clients, Mr. Fields often con- tracted with high-profile stars to appear in the commercials. Ey- die Gorme sang about Plymouth, and Rex Harrison was the spokesman for Dodge. In creating music for each product, Mr. Fields tries to de- vise melodies that set the tone for the commercial image. 'When we did the Helene Cur- tis cosmetic commercials, we wanted them to be feminine so we did fashion show music," he explained. "Then fashion show music was elevator music, very different from today's fashion show music, which is almost hard rock." Mr. Fields has made some technical contributions now in wide use. A click track for film scoring allows the sound and pic- ture to be closely synchronized without a stopwatch or precise viewing. Up-close microphones on every instrument during recording assures that specific sounds can be isolated and picked up later. Although he has equipped his studio with the latest computer synthesizing components, he often asks an engineer to make the most of them while he stays true to earlier composing meth- ods. "Composing takes place in my head," he said. "If I can't hear music in my mind before I write it, it's not going to happen." Although there have been a lot of exciting moments in Mr. Fields' career, the one that stands out occurred in the late '70s, when a large advertising agency was about to lose an im- portant automotive account. Ex- ecutives called him in to quickly upgrade their presentation with new music. "It didn't take me long to write the melodies, but it took three days of working day and night to record them," he reported. "The day after I finished, I went down to the agency and found the peo- ple partying. I kept the account for them!" There was one occasion when Mr. Fields used what he consid- ered Jewish-sounding music. Having grown up in a home where his mother, Sally Fields, was active in the Jewish corn- munity and opened the first El Al office in Michigan, he built on that for a commercial promoting a New York department store. The lyrics already had been com- pleted by the agency and had to do with a pushcart in the build- ing. Mr. Fields has tried his hand at composing non-commercial music. "I Love You More Than Anything' was recorded by Lar- ry Santos, and occasionally is played by J.P. McCarthy on his WJR Radio show. Mr. Fields volunteered his services to write the words and music for the "Welcome to Your City" public service commercials that aired in the early '80s to boost Detroit. His "Go Get 'Ern, Tigers" was played in the Disney film Tiger Town. "Over the years, the hours and the deadlines have been the hardest part of my work," said Mr. Fields, a widower with a grown son and daughter. "I used to work day and night and sleep on the floor to meet deadlines. I don't do that anymore." ID 0, 0, CO - CC co 2 LLJ LU 61