While serving in the
United States Navy during
World War II as a "radar specialist" stationed in
San Francisco, the self-taught piano player formed a band, Eddie Brandt and the Hollywood Hicks. "He composed music with
Spike Jones,
Spade Cooley,
Eddie Cantor and
George Motola in the 1940s, producing hit songs including "Heaven Knows," "None but the Lonely Heart," "There's No Place Like Hawaii," "I'm Drowning My Sorrows," "The Tears in Your Eyes," "High School Romance," "Shortnin' Bread Rock" and "Rock and Roll Wedding."" After the war, he moved to
Hollywood. In the early 1950s, he toured with trios and married a member of one of them, singer Ruthie James. James, as Kay Cee Jones, sang the lead vocal on the first recording of Brandt's popular "Shortnin' Bread Rock". The marriage ended in 1956. He was also a bandleader for KLAC-TV Channel 13. ==Television==