Early years Born in
Chicago,
Illinois, United States, As a child, he sang in his church's choir; he also played ukulele, banjo and accordion. As a teenager, he turned playing the accordion into a profession in his uncle's quartet, which he continued until he volunteered into the
Navy during
World War II in 1943 aboard the aircraft carrier
USS Lexington. Upon his return from service, Dee spent his Navy earnings on a
Hammond Model A organ, one of the earliest of its kind. With money from the
G.I. Bill, he received instruction in organ at the
Chicago Conservatory of Music. Afterwards, he began playing hotels and night clubs in the south in the late 1940s to some degree of success, but no record contracts.
Decca/MCA years It was not until the early 1950s that Dee was signed up to Decca after country singer
Red Foley heard him playing at the Plantation Inn in
Nashville, Tennessee, and thought Dee's unique sound would be a good contrast to the label's then prominent organist,
Ethel Smith. Dee made good, and his original composition "Plantation Boogie" charted at No. 19 in 1955. Dee re-recorded the hit on numerous albums, and was often imitated, even plagiarized, but never duplicated. Dee wrote "Chicken in the Rough", and recorded the song as a duet with saxophonist
Boots Randolph. The uncanny similarity of "
Yakety Sax" to Dee's "Chicken in the Rough" is often noted. Dee ventured into recording albums for Decca starting in 1954 with his first LP,
Dee-lightful. Part of Dee's charm was his albums' zany covers featuring Dee in various situations, and titles with puns that usually included his name, such as
Dee-Lirious,
Dee-Licious, and
Dee-Most! Dee recorded dozens of albums for Decca, which sold moderately well although only three of them managed to hit the
Billboard Hot 200 album chart; like many
easy-listening instrumental artists of the day, he had a following that bought his albums over the years, but rarely rushed out to buy them when newly released so that they would make the chart. His recordings featured organ with other instruments, that were produced by
Owen Bradley and developed into the
Nashville sound and
country pop of the 1970s and 1980s. Dee was nearly always backed by percussion; depending on the song, he also recorded with guitarists,
Les Paul and
Chet Atkins;
bass; a backup
chorus; strings; horns such as
saxophones,
trombones,
trumpets; and even the
banjo. Dee played various instruments, and was influential in the history of organs and keyboards. Dee was recognized for his contribution to the field of music by
Time Life for what Dee described as "bringing the organ out of the church and into mainstream music". When Dee married his second wife, Hendrica, in 1960, the couple settled down in Sarasota and eventually
St. Petersburg, Florida, which would become the base of Dee's operations for the rest of his career. They had two children: Raymond and Georgia. Lenny Dee Jr., his drummer, was one of three children from his first marriage (Betty), daughters are Barbara and Linda. Despite his contract with Decca, Dee's first love was live performance. Dee loved people and he loved to entertain them with music and laughter. In the mid-1950s, he performed for several summers at the Lake Breeze Hotel lounge, at Buckeye Lake, just east of
Columbus, Ohio. Around 1960, he played for a few years at a lounge in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida. During the 1960s and 1970s,
St. Petersburg Beach was a popular vacation destination, complete with an early theme park and a few luxury resorts. In 1967, after performing regularly at Davy Jones Locker, and later in hotel super clubs at St. Petersburg Beach such as the Desert Ranch and Dolphin Beach resorts, Dee started his own up-scale supper club, named Lenny Dee's Dolphin Den. He held two shows each night with full bands playing dancing music between shows, and he packed the supper club nightly. Dee was a significant attraction to St. Petersburg Beach for decades. In the 1980s, he later opened Lenny Dee's King's Inn a few miles away. His supper club format — with dinner, drinks, opening acts and his musical and his comedy routines — was popular with local fans and visitors from around the world. The supper club's menu included the "One Pound Pork Chop", along with other high-end steak house selections. Although he was not a country music performer per se (his work fell more into the
easy listening category), his stage act included comedy typical of the Nashville country music entertainment genre, with jokes and changing the lyrics of songs, and routines that Dee was noted for, such as making realistic sounds of trains, whistles, and waves of water with the organ while wearing wild hats as costume. A lover of animals, Dee often included his pet dog, a black toy poodle he owned named "Little Miss Muffett", in his routine. The dog was trained to bark along with some of his numbers and smiled on queue. His beloved Miss Muffett lived to be 17; she had kept him company while he traveled on the road earlier in his career. Fans continued to ask him about the dog long after she had died. His television credits include appearances on
Toast of the Town with
Ed Sullivan,
The Tonight Show with
Jack Paar,
The Lawrence Welk Show, and later
Nashville Now. Dee even had his own show in the mid-1950s on
WFLA-TV in Tampa, Florida called ''Ladies' Day with Lenny Dee''; it enjoyed a brief run.
Later years Dee continued recording into the early 1980s, adding a background orchestra in the late 1960s as many other easy listening performers were doing at the time. By the late 1970s, Dee was in less demand. After recording 56 albums, he was finally released from the MCA label, along with many other easy listening artists. Time Life honored him for his 1950's contribution to music, including his recording of "A Foggy Day (In London Town) - Lenny Dee" on the CD
Instrumental Favorites - Around the World (A Time Life Collection). Dee spent the rest of his career at his night clubs and on tour, but the demand for his music continued to decline. In 1999, Dee played on a series of cruise ship tours. He retired in 2003. He died at home on February 12, 2006, in St. Petersburg, aged 83. ==Instruments==