- Dee Palmer
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Dee Palmer Origin Wolverhampton, England Occupations Arranger, keyboardist Years active 1967-present Associated acts Jethro Tull Dee Palmer is an English composer arranger and keyboardist best known for having been a member of the rock group Jethro Tull.
Palmer studied composition at the Royal Academy of Music with Richard Rodney Bennet,winning the Eric Coates Prize and The Boosey and Hawkes Prize. She was appointed a Fellow of The Royal Academy of Music in 1994.
Contents
Jethro Tull and other works
Going about her early career as a jobbing arranger and conductor of recording sessions, Palmer recorded her first album project, Nicola, in 1967 with Bert Jansch. She was then referred to Terry Ellis, then manager of the early Jethro Tull, which was making its first album at Sound Techniques Studio in Chelsea, London. At short notice, Palmer came up with arrangements for the horns and strings on the Mick Abrahams composition, "Move on Alone" from the This Was album. This work and professional performance endeared her to the band and she was soon to visit them again, with a string quartet arrangement to "A Christmas Song". Palmer arranged string, brass, and woodwind parts for Jethro Tull songs in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before formally joining the group in 1976 and primarily playing electronic keyboard instruments. In 1980, leader Ian Anderson intended to release the album A with other musicians as a solo project (under the name 'Ian Anderson') but was persuaded by his record label to release it instead under the 'Jethro Tull' name. This resulted in every member of the group, including Palmer, leaving except guitarist Martin Barre and Anderson himself. Palmer formed a new group, Tallis, with former Jethro Tull pianist and organist John Evan. The new group was not commercially successful, and Palmer returned to film scoring and sessions. Beginning in the 1980s, Palmer produced several albums of orchestral arrangements of the music of various rock groups, including Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes, The Beatles and Queen.
Jethro Tull Discography with Palmer
Providing orchestral arrangements:
- This Was (1968)
- Stand Up (1969)
- Benefit (1970)
- Aqualung (1971)
- Thick as a Brick (1972)
- War Child (1974)
- Minstrel in the Gallery (1975)
- Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die! (1976)
As a full-time member:
- Songs from the Wood (1977)
- Heavy Horses (1978)
- Bursting Out (1978 live album)
- Stormwatch (1979)
- Nightcap : The Unreleased Masters 1972-1991 (1993)
- Live at Madison Square Garden 1978 (2009 DVD)
Symphonic arrangements
- A Classic Case, also known as Classic Jethro Tull (1986)
- We Know What We Like (Genesis) (1987)
- Orchestral Maneuvers: The Music Of Pink Floyd (1991)
- Symphonic Music of Yes (1993)
- Passing Open Windows: A Symphonic Tribute to Queen (1996)
- Orchestral Sgt. Pepper's (version of The Beatles' album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band)
References
External links
- Biography at Jethro Tull official website
- Announcement of gender reassignment on Jethro Tull website (archived here)
- Dee Palmer interview from Classic Rock Revisited (archived here)
- Dee Palmer interview with "A New Day"
Jethro Tull Ian Anderson · Martin Barre · David Goodier · John O'Hara · Doane Perry
Mick Abrahams · Clive Bunker · Glenn Cornick · Barriemore Barlow · Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond · John Evan · David Palmer · John Glascock · Mark Craney · Peter-John Vettese · Eddie Jobson · Dave Pegg · Gerry Conway · Maartin Allcock · Dave Mattacks · Jonathan Noyce · Andrew Giddings · Tony IommiStudio albums This Was · Stand Up · Benefit · Aqualung · Thick as a Brick · A Passion Play · War Child · Minstrel in the Gallery · Too Old to Rock 'n' Roll: Too Young to Die! · Songs from the Wood · Heavy Horses · Stormwatch · A · The Broadsword and the Beast · Under Wraps · Crest of a Knave · Rock Island · Catfish Rising · Roots to Branches · J-Tull Dot Com · The Jethro Tull Christmas AlbumLive albums Bursting Out · Live at Hammersmith '84 · Jethro Tull In Concert · A Little Light Music · Living with the Past · Nothing Is Easy: Live at the Isle of Wight 1970 · Aqualung Live · Ian Anderson Plays the Orchestral Jethro Tull · Live at Madison Square Garden 1978Compilations Living in the Past · M.U. – The Best of Jethro Tull · Repeat – The Best of Jethro Tull – Vol II · Original Masters · 20 Years of Jethro Tull: Highlights · The Best of Jethro Tull – The Anniversary Collection · Nightcap · Through the Years · The Very Best of Jethro Tull · Essential · The Best of Acoustic Jethro TullBoxed sets Videos Slipstream · 20 Years of Jethro Tull · 25th Anniversary Video · Living with the Past · A New Day Yesterday · Nothing Is Easy: Live at the Isle of Wight 1970 · Live At Montreux 2003 · Jack in the Green · Classic Artists: Jethro Tull · Live at Madison Square Garden 1978Singles "Sunshine Day" / "Aeroplane" (as "Jethro Toe") · "A Song for Jeffrey" / "One for John Gee" · "Love Story" / "A Christmas Song" · "Living in the Past" / "Driving Song" · "Sweet Dream" / "17" · "Bouree" · "Witch's Promise" / "Teacher" · "Inside" / "Alive and Well and Living In" · "Life Is A Long Song" · "Hymn 43" · "Living in the Past" · "A Passion Play" · "Bungle in the Jungle" / "Back-Door Angel" · "Minstrel in the Gallery" / "Summerday Sands" · "Living in the Past" / "Requiem" · "Too Old to Rock And Roll, Too Young to Die" / "Rainbow Blues" · "Locomotive Breath" · "The Whistler" · "A Stitch in Time" / "Sweet Dream" · "Beastie" · "Fallen On Hard Times" · "Lap of Luxury" · "Farm on the Freeway" · "Jump Start" · "Steel Monkey" · "Said She Was a Dancer" · "Part of the Machine" · "Kissing Willie" · "Another Christmas Song" · "Rocks on the Road" · "Living in the (Slightly More Recent) Past" · "Bends Like a Willow"Tours Too Old To Rock 'N' Roll Tour · Heavy Horses Tour · Stormwatch TourRelated articles Discography · A Billion Hands Concert · The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus · Ian Anderson solo discographyCategories:- Living people
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Music
- English keyboardists
- English rock keyboardists
- Transgender and transsexual musicians
- LGBT musicians from the United Kingdom
- Jethro Tull members
- LGBT people from England
- People from London
- People from Wolverhampton
- 1937 births
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