Press Kit

Full Biography

Dr. Dee Daniels is an accomplished vocalist and musician's musician who passionately delivers timeless performances in multiple genres that include: jazz, blues, gospel, and her original compositions. A sultry songsmith and master of storytelling, she has performed for royalty and international dignitaries on multiple occasions, and has an extensive list of performances with combos and big bands. Her international career includes performances across Europe, the United Kingdom, Russia, Australia, South America, Hong Kong, Japan, India, Egypt, twelve African countries, and throughout the United States and Canada.

She crossed the threshold of the classical world with the creation of her spellbinding Symphony Pops programs, “Great Ladies of Swing”, “The Great American Swing Book”, "A Night Out With The Boys", ”The Soul of Ray: The Music of Ray Charles”, and "Red, Hot, and Blues". She shares a successful Pops program with Juno Award winner, Denzal Sinclaire, entitled "Unforgettable: The Music of Nat and Natalie Cole". Dee has performed and recorded with orchestras throughout North America and abroad. In addition to her accredited presence and magnetic prowess on keys, Daniels adds a spellbinding four octave plus vocal range to her potent, natural and unique spin on every song she touches. 

Her vocal style was born deep in the gospel roots of her stepfather’s Baptist church choir in Oakland, California, refined through the R&B era, and smoothly polished during a five-year stay in The Netherlands and Belgium from 1982 to 1987. Dee Daniels has performed and/or recorded with the who’s who of the Jazz world including Jazz legends: Clark Terry, Mulgrew Miller, Claudio Roditti, Benny Green, Houston Person, John Clayton, Russell Malone, Wycliffe Gordon, Cyrus Chestnut, Ken Peplowski, Kenny Barron, Bill Mays, Jeff Clayton, Benny Golson, Grady Tate, Toots Thielemans, Jeff Hamilton, Monty Alexander, Steve Wilson, Marvin Stamm, Lewis Nash, Kenny Washington, Norman Simmons, Hank and Elvin Jones, Dennis Mackrel, Martin Wind, Bucky Pizzarelli, Helen Sung, Christian McBride, David Young, Neil Swainson, Dave Stryker, Bruce Forman, Victor Lewis, and many, many more.

In 2020 the National Congress of Black Women of Canada honoured Dee with a Legacy Award; in 2010 she received a nomination for an Atlanta Theater Suzi Bass Award; in 2008 she received the President’s Award from Capilano University and in 2009 became the first recipient of the University's Honorary Doctorate Degree (Fine Arts); in 2003 she was a recipient of the prestigious and most coveted Commemorative Medal for the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The same year saw her induction into the University of Montana’s School of Fine Arts Hall of Honor (in 1997 the University honoured her with a Distinguished Alumni Award); 2002 induction into the British Columbia Entertainment Hall of Fame and member of Vancouver’s Granville Street Walk of Fame are a testament to her dedication to music.

Dee has cultivated a diverse career that has also seen her on theatre stages including the 2009 premiere of New York choreographer, Twyla Tharp’s, musical, Come Fly Away, and the critically acclaimed musical, Wang Dang Doodle at the Arts Club in Vancouver, BC. She is an inspirational speaker with keynote addresses being delivered at the Women’s CEO & Senior Management Summit in Toronto, the British Columbia Music Teachers Conference, commencement addresses at Capilano University, and many more.

An internationally respected vocal clinician, adjudicator and mentor, Dee presents clinics, workshops, and master classes globally. She is a firm believer in mentorship and "giving back". In 2001 she created the Dee Daniels Jazz Vocal Scholarship at Capilano University and in 2017 after fifteen years moved it to the DeMiero Jazz Festival in Edmonds, WA. In 2023 she created a second scholarship through JEN (Jazz Education Network. From 2019 - 2020 she was on the faculty of the Conservatory of Music at the University of the Pacific (CA); served on the President's Advisory Council for the Jazz Education Network (JEN) from 2016 - 2018; was Artistic Director for the West Coast’s DeMiero Jazz Fest from 2011 to 2017; she was on the faculty of the vocal department of the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College (NY) 2013 - 2014. In 2013, she created the week-long Dee Daniels Vocal Jazz Workshop Camp at the Sitka Fine Arts Camp. She was the first artist to serve on the Advisory Board of the Lionel Hampton International Jazz Festival (2002 - 2008), and has received several awards for her contribution in the field of music performance, music education, and community service.

Dee has several CDs as a leader to her credit in addition to being a guest artist on CDs of other artists, and on compilation CDs internationally. Her latest release, Let It Shine! Let It Shine! (2023) has garnered her a nomination for a 2023 Western Canada Music Awards Spiritual Artist of the Year. Her critically acclaimed 2021 CD release, The Promise, won her the POP Awards Album of the Year (Germany), the Western Canada Music Awards Spiritual Artist of the Year, Global Music Awards, Jazziz Editor's Choice Top 10 of the Month to name a few. Visit www.deedaniels.com for further information.

Short Biographies

(53 Word Count)

Dee Daniels is a jazz vocalist with a unique sound, steeped in the art of storytelling through song. Performing a mix of standards, blues, gospel, and original compositions, all with interesting and unique arrangements, she transcends musical borders when she brings her jazz styling, infused with gospel and blues flavoring to the stage.

(91 Word Count)

With a palpable authenticity, towering four-octave range, and a powerful blues and gospel-tinged jazz vocal approach, Dee Daniels has built a sterling reputation amongst jazz fans and critics around the world for over four decades. Well represented throughout her career in performances and recordings with such jazz luminaries as Monty Alexander, Russell Malone, Cyrus Chestnut, Houston Person, John Clayton, Ken Peplowski, Kenny Barron, to mention a few, she has also performed and/or recorded with symphony orchestras and big bands globally. Learn more about Dee at www.deedaniels.com                                                                                                                                                                   

(132 Word Count)

Dee Daniels is a unique talent who transcends musical borders when she brings her jazz styling, infused with gospel and blues flavoring, to the stage. She performs and records globally with symphony orchestras, big bands, combos, and with numerous jazz legends­ including Monty Alexander, John Clayton, Wycliffe Gordon, Cyrus Chestnut, Eric Alexander, Ken Peplowski, and Russell Malone. Dee has 15 CDs as a leader to her credit, including her latest release, Let It Shine! Let It Shine!, in duo with Juno-nominated vocalist Denzal Sinclaire and 2021 multi-award winning and critically acclaimed CD, The Promise. Her 2013 release, State of the Art, on Criss Cross Jazz Records which made her the first vocalist and female leader in the label’s 40+ year history. Visit www.deedaniels.com for detailed information about Dee’s extensive career.      

(200 Word Count)

With a palpable authenticity, towering five-octave range, a powerful blues and gospel-tinged jazz vocal approach, Dee Daniels has built a sterling reputation amongst jazz fans and critics around the world for over four decades. One critic says, “Daniels is effortless and fluid in reaches that defy other singers. Her voice is so enchanting that the words she sings almost don’t matter. She embodies the music, the sound becomes flesh.” Dee has 15 CDs as a leader and has performed and/or recorded with the who’s who of the Jazz world including Jazz legends, both past and present. The list includes Benny Green, Houston Person, Russell Malone, Wycliffe Gordon, Cyrus Chestnut, Ken Peplowski, Kenny Barron, Toots Thielemans, Hank and Elvin Jones, Monty Alexander, Lionel Hampton, and Herb Ellis. She is the recipient of many awards in music, education, and community services. Her awards include the 2022 Pop Award (Germany) for Album of the Year; Legacy Award from the National Congress of Black Women Foundation; Western Canadian Music Award; Global Music Award; the Commemorative Medal for the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II; induction into the BC Entertainment Hall of Fame; and a 2009 Honorary Doctorate Degree of Fine Arts.

(250 Word Count)

Dee Daniels is a crowd pleaser and a musician’s musician. Whether accompanying herself at the piano, fronting a trio, big band or symphony, she is a unique talent who transcends musical borders when she brings her jazz styling, infused with gospel and blues flavouring, to the stage.

The stepdaughter of a Baptist minister, Dee was born and raised in Oakland, CA. Though she graduated from university with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Art Education, music was always a big part of her life. However, she didn’t discover her true calling to it until after teaching art in a Seattle high school for a year. She then joined a band, resigned her teaching position, and the rest is history!

She has since traveled the world with her music. She has shared the stage and/or recorded with numerous legends of jazz including Houston Person, Monty Alexander, John Clayton, Russell Malone, Cyrus Chestnut, Ken Peplowski, and Lewis Nash to mention a few. Her diverse career has seen her in clubs, on festivals, prestigious music halls around the world, theater stages, television and radio, performances for royalty and international dignitaries, and on many recordings as leader or guest.

Dee has also established herself as a jazz vocalist in demand by the classical world, performing her five symphonic Pops programs with orchestras in the US, Canada, and Europe. Many organizations and institutions in and out of the music industry have recognized Dee with awards for her contributions in music, education, and community service.

Discography

"LET IT SHINE! LET IT SHINE! - 2023

PAYIN' MY DUES - 2023 JAY LAWRENCE AND THE PLATINUM JAZZ ORCHESTRA (Guest Artist)

"LET FREEDOM RING (THE BALLAD OF JOHN LEWIS)" - 2021

"THE PROMISE - DELUXE EDITION" - 2021

“INTIMATE CONVERSATIONS” - 2014

“STATE OF THE ART” - 2013

“INTIMATE ELLINGTON: BALLADS AND BLUES” - 2012 (Guest Artist)

“JAZZ DIVA SERIES - DEE DANIELS” - 2011

“JAZZINIT” - 2007

“CROSSOVER XMAS - THE SOUND GOES BIG” - 2007 (Guest Artist)

“DEE DANIELS LIVE AT BIBLO, a DVD” - 2006

“SACRED MUSIC OF DUKE ELLINGTON” - 2006 (Guest Artist)

“FIRST NAME BASIS” 2006 (Guest Artist)

“SWINGIN’ AFFAIR” - 2006 (Guest Artist)

“CROSSOVER XMAS” - 2005 (Guest Artist)

“FEELS SO GOOD!” - 2002

“LOVE STORY” - 2000

“HOLIDAY POPS WITH THE VANCOUVER SYMPHONY” - 2000 (Guest Artist)

“WISH ME LOVE” - 1996

“DRIP SOME GREASE” - 1995 (Guest Artist)

“CLOSE ENCOUNTER OF THE SWINGIN’ KIND” - 1991

“LET’S TALK BUSINESS” - 1990

“THE MUSIC MADE ME SING IT” - 1987

“ALL OF ME” - 1984

Photos

Click images to download high resolution photos.



Music Samples

Let Freedom Ring (The Ballad of John Lewis)

I Could Have Danced All Night

Here's That Rainy Day

I Who Have Nothing

Come Rain Or Come Shine

Sweet Georgia Brown

Videos

Performance Reviews

Dee Daniels – The Promise (Deluxe Edition)

Dee Daniels: The Promise (Deluxe Edition) by Bobby E. Davis Jr., Black Grooves (Archives of African American Music & Culture)

Dee Daniels sounds like many artists wrapped together in one package as she draws from jazz, classical and gospel music with her smooth inspirational voice. A force of spiritual bliss and freedom, Daniels’ vocal style was first molded in her stepfather’s Baptist church choir in Oakland, California. From these gospel roots she has continued her musical growth, becoming fluent in multiple genres and sharing the beautiful sound of her voice around the world. Daniels’ new release, The Promise, combines both the sacred and secular aesthetic of her artistry as she reflects on her current moment in life and battle with breast cancer. Upon learning about her condition in 2014, Daniels’ initial response was to remain calm: “I knew in my heart that I was about to embark on a journey that would lead me to the answer.” 

Daniels’ journey is reflected in the album’s 14 inspirational tracks such as “Choose Me,” which is about depending on Jesus in times of trouble, “letting his love and mercy fill your heart from day to day” to resolve your problems.  “I Am Forgiven,” featuring a beautiful piano and Hammond organ intro, is about repentance, facing your sins and making peace with God and man to gain true freedom. Similarly, the smooth jazz guitar ballad, “Love Inside,” speaks of the revelation of God’s love, which is the source of inner strength and direction.  Another song worth mention is the album’s first single, “Let Freedom Ring: The Ballad of John Lewis,” a tribute to the late civil rights leader and politician.

Daniels brings the vibe and the spirit to her music, creating an encouraging and strengthening moment for all of her listeners, especially those who may also be facing a battle with cancer. She is the true definition of a hero and The Promise is a direct reflection of her fortitude, courage and wisdom.

Dee Daniels Soars - Vocalist brings the good stuff Friday night
by Shawn O’Neal
Daily News staff writer

It’s become the natural question this time each year. If Dee Daniels doesn’t draw a standing ovation, has the University of Idaho Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival actually taken place?

Alas, the answer will have to wait for at least another year. In a night highlighted by female vocalists, the festival went to its first lady for an opening salvo and, as usual, the Vancouver, B.C. singer brought the crowd to it’s feet.

A night after teaming with singer Roberta Gambarini and saxophonist Houston Person to deliver one of the festival’s early highlights with “Honeysuckle Rose,” Daniels broke out the good stuff again Friday. Daniels’ bluesy deliver on “Dr. Feelgood” made the standing ovation that followed seem anticlimactic as the crowd had started rising to its feet before she was even finished.

Daniels was helped along by the guitar solo of Russell Malone, who seemed to revel in the song’s blues leanings. “It’s great to be here, especially when you have these guys up here with you,” Daniels said.

She was speaking of the house quartet of Malone, drummer Jeff Hamilton, bassist John Clayton and pianist Benny Green who gave way to Daniels on piano. Hamilton laid down a blistering solo on the opening tune, drawing the crowd’s early appreciation and – as Daniels did for the singers – setting the bar for the rest of the night’s instrumentalists.


More Daniels Needed
by Mary Kunz, News Classical Music Critic
The Buffalo News, Buffalo, New York

Dee Daniels’ voice brings to mind all the most delirious adjectives: Honeyed. Sweet. Low, rich, smooth and slow as molasses.

In “Everything Ellingto,” Daniels ended the first set with “I Got It Bad And That Ain’t Good.” It was one of the saddest things I’ve ever heard. By the time she finished the lament, she sounded as if she were sobbing into the microphone.

To round things out, she also belted out an “Everyday I Have The Blues” that would have brought a grin to Joe Williams’ face. This woman brought the house down. The raucous blues ended with a high note the likes of which I don’t think I’ve ever heard. Daniels held that note until it was thin as ribbon, then fattened it out and pulled it down into the lowlands. That’s the blues! After that, it’ll be a little tough to go back to the band at the corner bar.


RPO swing with the best
by John Pitcher, Staff Music Critic
Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, NY

Jazz vocalist Dee Daniels joined the RPO to sing a selection of Basie and Ellington songs, and she had little trouble stealing the show. In the great vocal tradition of Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughan, Daniels does much more than simply sing precisely and on pitch -- which she always did.

Instead, she used the extraordinary range and velvety texture of her voice like an instrument, wrapping its smoky texture around each word of a lyric to give the song added meaning, nuance and expression.


Showstoppers, Dee Daniels’ jazz liven Palm Beach Pops concert at the Kravis Center
by David A. Frye
Special to the Palm Beach Daily News

The second half of the program was dedicated to the “Great Ladies of Swing,” Peggy Lee, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald, with guest soloist Dee Daniels returning to the Pops stage.

Daniels, a vocalist with a four-octave range, has hung and sung with many of the best in the business, including Vaughan.

In short, the Great American Songbook is in her DNA. But while the easiest thing for a performer with this kind of assignment to do is to attempt to re-create the essence of the singers - or worse, slip into impressions of them - Daniels truly honored these "great ladies" by putting her own distinctive style on songs they made famous. The result was a performance that was amazingly fresh and fun.


CSO showcases Jazz Chanteuse Dee Daniels
by Lindsay Koob
Night of Nostalgia
Charleston City Paper

The Charleston Symphony began its McCrady’s Pops series with a bang last Saturday, treating a fair-sized audience to a delightful evening of swing-era standards from jazz vocalist-extraordinaire Dee Daniels.

The program, entitled Great Ladies of Swing, was a tribute to four of our greatest jazz chanteuses: Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, and Sarah Vaughan. Given their exalted statures, it wasn’t hard to come up with lots of great music.

No sooner had she delivered “There’ll Be Some Changes Made,” her first number, when she paused to chat with her listeners from the stage – and she soon had us laughing a lot and eating out of her hand. I kid you not: The lady stood a willowy six-foot-five (in four-inch heels), but she asked us to imagine her as a short, very voluptuous creature with a “blond bob” – even though (as she pointed out) she’s black.

She soon had us trained to respond to her questions with resounding choruses of “Yes, Dee.”

After all, she had mesmerized us by then, with that fabulous voice of hers. Her vocal foundation is a rich, often breathy alto, but she made it croon, whimper, simper, flirt, cajole, sob, growl, and scream. She indulged her stupefying four-octave range now and then – swooping up into the vocal stratosphere and laying down silky, spine-tingling strings of high notes.

I wish I had room to tell you about all the wonderful, nostalgia-ridden songs she brought to vivid life, but my faves included two Billie Holiday numbers: “God Bless the Child” and a sock-it-to-’em piece called “Gimme a Pigfoot.” Ella Fitzgerald treasures included “Summertime,” “Got It Bad (And That Ain’t Good).” Among the Sarah Vaughan specialties were “Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars” and “Send in the Clowns.”

The CSO – her “big band” backup for the evening – did some sweet swinging of its own under resident conductor Scott Terrell. Then there was her terrific combo: Ted Brancato at the piano, with Russell Botten on bass and Greg Williamson on drums.

Did we all have the kind of “finger-snappin’, toe-tappin’, head-bobbin’ good time” that she told us to? And do we want her to come back soon?

All together, now: “Yes, Dee.”


Dee Daniels - Vancouver’s Honeysuckle Rose
by Joe Montague
Riveting Riffs Magazine

Singing a jazz cover of Earth, Wind & Fire’s, “Can’t Hide Love,” Dee Daniels was impressive from the time that she took to the stage, with her opening tune, at the Kay Meek Centre Studio Theatre in West Vancouver, Canada. Daniels, whose music receives plenty of airplay in both the United States and Canada, kicked off Vancouver’s Winter Song Festival, in the intimate, studio theater, which had been redesigned to take on a jazz lounge like atmosphere.

Dressed in high heels that put the statuesque Daniels well over six feet tall, sheer charcoal colored slacks, and a charcoal and red embroidered jacket, her long fingers, curled around the microphone, as she cooed the Stevie Wonder tune, “Another Star,” which Daniels covered for her JAZZINIT CD.

Daniels, infused the 1926 Fred Rose and Walter Hirsch song, “Deed I Do,” with passion and intimacy, while injecting sense of flirting with both the lyrics and her audience. Stage actress and singer Ruth Etting, first made the song famous recording it for Columbia, however it is Dee Daniels, who on this evening delivered with authenticity, the lines, “Do I love you? / Oh my, do I? Honey, ’deed I do!” Were she not wearing a wedding ring, there may have been more than a few suitors lining up between sets.

Daniel’s first set consisted mostly of songs from what numerous artists are now referring to as the New American Songbook. Tunes such as James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain,” the Otis Taylor / Aretha Franklin song, “Respect,” Lionel Richie’s, “Hello,” and Ruby and The Romantic’s, # 1 song from 1963, “Our Day Will Come.” Daniel’s also unveiled an incredible cover of the Doobie Brothers’ “What A Fool Believes.” All of the songs, have been set in new jazz arrangements and can be heard on Daniels’ CD JAZZINIT.

For her second set, Daniels took her fans for a musical stroll down memory lane, dipping into the more traditional standards. Perhaps the most romantic moment of the evening came when Dee Daniels gently cooed, “It Had To Be You,” leaving the listener with not much else to do but sigh, and with thoughts of whispering “I love you,” in the ear of that someone special.


Incredible Singer Dee Daniels Has a Four-Octave Range
by Red Robinson
The Vancouver Sun

“Silky impassioned.” “Extraordinary range.” “She can sing gospel, jazz and blues comfortably and with great emotion.” These are some of the descriptions various publications around the world have used to proclaim the incredible talents of Dee Daniels.

Her four-octave range enthralls an audience. Whether she’s performing in an intimate jazz club or fronting a big band or full symphony orchestra, she seems relaxed, comfortable and in command at all times. Like Diana Krall, she accompanies herself on the piano with exceptional ease and artistry.

Her musical journey began in her stepfather’s church choir in Oakland, Calif. She honed her talents in the R&B era, then left for a five-year stay in Europe (1982 - 1987). During those learning years she had the opportunity to perform with jazz legends such as Toots Thielemans, Johnny Griffin and Ed Thigpen to name a few. She even sang the blues with the late Sarah Vaughan and gospel with Joe Williams.

Her career has taken her all over the world and to all the major international festivals including Japan’s Kobe Jazz Street Festival, Ireland’s Cork Jazz Festival, the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival in the US, and of course, the DuMaurier Jazz Festivals here in Canada.

Along with her incredible talent, Daniels is also a very giving person, and in 2001 established the Dee Daniels Jazz Vocal Scholarship at Capilano College for young singers and musicians. Her own honors include the FANS Award (a North Vancouver Arts Council presentation), a nomination for Vocalist of the Year, and a nomination for her Love Story album as Best Jazz CD of the Year by the West Coast Music Awards.

Daniels was inducted into the B.C. Entertainment Hall of Fame in 2002, and has a plaque bearing her name on Vancouver’s Walk of Fame on Granville Street. In 2003, she received the prestigious Commemorative Medal for the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, and was inducted into the University of Montana’s School of Fine Arts, Hall of Honour.

The artists Daniels has performed with reads like a who’s who: John Clayton Jr., Clark Terry, Hank Jones, Houston Person, Russell Malone, Jeff Hamilton, Ken Peplowski, Monty Alexander, and more. Each is a fan of her inimitable talent. She also performs on a regular basis with symphony orchestras including those in Vancouver, Toronto, Winnipeg and Calgary, Berlin, Florida, Baltimore and Detroit.

Daniels is passionate about her work and it shows. It is a distinct pleasure for me to have this opportunity to inform you of this amazing lady’s multi-faceted talents.