Dee Bell
Dee Bell is an American jazz singer.
Personal life
Bell grew up in a musical family and began playing music at home. She played clarinet in the Plainfield High School band and performed in an a cappella trio from age ten through her last year of high school. She graduated from Indiana University in December 1972, lived on the edge of the Hoosier National Forest in a two-room cabin with a woodstove for heat, and was co-founder and head chef of the Earth Kitchen vegetarian restaurant in Bloomington, Indiana.Career
In the late 1970s, Bell moved to California and worked at a restaurant in Sausalito. While singing "Happy Birthday" to a customer, she was heard by jazz guitarist Eddie Duran, and he invited her to sing with his band. They made a demo tape which became her first album, Let There Be Love, recorded with Duran and Stan Getz. They recorded another album for Concord Jazz, this time with Tom Harrell.Bell recorded a third album, Sagacious Grace in 1990 with Houston Person and John Stowell, but technical problems during recording kept the album from being released. She left the music business and became a grade school music teacher in Mill Valley. In 2011 audio engineers fixed the problems with Sagacious Grace and the album was released by Laser Records. It reached No. 31 on the JazzWeek radio chart.
After the death of her musical director, Al Plank, Dee met Marcos Silva backstage after she performed a Marcos Valle song, The Face I Love at the same tribute to Merrilee Trost where Marcos played. They merged her swing style with his command of Brazilian rhythms and performed the belated CD release of Sagacious Grace at the Throckmorton Theatre mentioned above. They followed this performance with three CDs on the Laser Records label. Silva.Bell.Elation, Lins, Lennox, & Life, and Love for Sailin' Over Seas: Then & Now.
Bell has written lyrics with permission and copyrights to Billy Strayhorn's Isfahan, Jimmy Rowles The Peacocks, Don Sebesky's You Can't Go Home Again You_Can't_Go_Home_Again_(album), and Ivan Lins', Acaso, Depois dos Temporais, and Choros das Aguas .