He continued to straddle these styles into the 1950s, playing swing standards such as "
Tuxedo Junction" and "
Begin the Beguine" in a rocking
R&B style. In the late 1950s he moved to Los Angeles, joining
Rendezvous Records, for whom he ran the house band. This included pianist
Ernie Freeman, guitarist
Rene Hall (who had previously worked with Fields in the 1930s), saxophonist
Plas Johnson, and drummer
Earl Palmer. In 1959 this band had an international hit with an R&B version of
Glenn Miller's "
In the Mood", credited to the Ernie Fields Orchestra, which reached number 4 on the
Billboard chart. The track also peaked at number 13 in the
UK Singles Chart. The band, with minor changes of personnel, went on to record
instrumentals under many different names, including
B. Bumble and the Stingers,
the Marketts and
the Routers. Rendezvous Records folded in late 1963, and Fields retired soon after and returned to Tulsa. He died in May 1997, at the age of 92. In 2013 his family donated his memorabilia to the planned Oklahoma Museum of Popular Culture. His son is the saxophonist and bandleader
Ernie Fields, Jr., and his daughter Carmen became a journalist in Boston, where she co-hosted the
evening news for
WGBH-TV. ==References==