Leeno Dee is an Australian-born bassist, singer and songwriter, best known for his major label acts Jerk, Candy Harlots and his current band Dept. of Gloom.

Leeno Dee
Dee in 2018
Dee in 2018
Background information
BornSydney, Australia
GenresIndustrial rock, alternative rock, alternative metal, gothic rock
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
Instrument(s)Bass guitar, vocals

Early life

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Dee was born in Sydney and was bitten by the music bug at the age of 8, "I heard The Sweet and was totally floored-then came Slade, Alice Cooper, Bowie and that whole landslide of British glam". At 12, he began playing guitar and at 16 switched to bass, which became his main instrument." I had always gravitated to the bassist in bands-even when I didn't know what a bss was-they just seemed the coolest, or wackiest- like Steve Priest, from Sweet-then when I saw Gene Simmons on the cover of KISS Alive-I was done for" (BassBusters POD 2020)

Career

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Dept. of Gloom

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Dee[1] formed Dept. of Gloom[2] in June 2016 with longtime cohort guitarist Phil Bowley and drummer AJ. In August 2016, the lineup was completed with former Genitorturers guitarist Bizz Tronix. Following a string of shows, the band entered the studio in March/April 2018 to record their debut EP set for release in the second half of 2018. That EP was postponed, and following COVID-19 the band began recording a full-length debut album, set for a mid/late 2022 release. Dept. of Gloom also opened for American hard rockers Skid Row, Hardcore Superstar and others, and also headlined their own shows.

Melody Black

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In 2010, Dee formed Melody Black who released an album - Love Your Demons[3] - on the RIOT label through Warner Music Group. The album featured nine songs all composed by Dee.[4] In 2012, their cover of The Sweet's classic glam anthem Ballroom Blitz reached the number 1 position on iTunes Chart in Australia. Melody Black[5] also toured with various acts, including Rose Tattoo and Misfits.

In 2006, Dee became part of INK along with former Jerk members Charles Cilia and Jonathan Devoy. They released two CDs: Lead...Or Follow and Black Water Reign, and toured extensively, including runs with Deathstars, 69 Eyes and Skid Row.

Jerk

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In 2000, Dee was asked to join industrial metal band Jerk,[6] recording and releasing their debut self-titled EP in 2001. This led to the band being signed to a worldwide deal with Sony Music.[7] In June, Dee visited Los Angeles where in addition to meeting with several music industry types he attended the Summer Party at Playboy Mansion in Holmby Hills. Jerk then recorded their debut major label album When Pure Is Defiled, which reached No. 31 on the ARIA Charts[8] and spawned two number 1 Triple J singles, I Hate People Like That and Just What You Need. The album was produced in Sydney and Los Angeles with both Mark Opitz (INXS, AC/DC, Steelheart) and Sean Beavan (Nine Inch Nails, Marilyn Manson, Guns N' Roses, Slayer, Depeche Mode) at Beavan's Blue Room Studios in L.A. Jerk toured with Marilyn Manson, Disturbed, Insane Clown Posse, P.O.D. and Killing Joke, amongst others. The band also made many TV appearances including MTV, Rage, Channel V and others, in addition to a crowd stopping appearance at the ARIA Music Awards in 2003.

Candy Harlots

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Dee's first professional band saw him become the third and final bassist in Candy Harlots. Following a string of shows including tours with Divinyls, The Angels and AC/DC, and releasing two No. 1 and No. 2 alternative chart singles Red Hot Rocket and Danger, the band signed a deal with Virgin Records. Their album Five Wicked Ways was produced by Peter Blyton (Choirboys). Dee then flew to L.A. for three weeks to oversee the mix sessions with Jeff Hendrickson (Van Halen, Bon Jovi, Joan Jett, Vain). The album spawned two charting singles: The Lady Shakes (No. 17 ARIA) and Sister's Crazy (No. 20 ARIA).

Equipment/Endorsement

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Dee currently plays Rickenbacker 4003S/4000 basses, Tech 21VTB 1969 amplifiers, Markbass CL410 CABS, Korg Pitch-black Rack Tuner Pro, Line 6 Relay G50 Wireless System, and GHS strings. Previous endorsements include Ashdown amps UK, Markbass amps Italy and RotoSound strings UK.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Scott Adams (26 May 2016). "Metal Origins: Leeno Dee". Retrieved 21 April 2018. I wanted to live and breathe hard rock and metal, I wanted to play it, sing it and live it. I've continued to love, play and live it- in all its forms since then.
  2. ^ Sentinel Daily (2 June 2017). "Dept. of Gloom: New Video released". Retrieved 21 April 2018. A firey twin guitar assault, driven supercharged bass and drums against a shimmering backdrop of electro synths, topped off with three distinctive lead vocalists… Dept. Of Gloom hearken back to a time when bands were rockstars and rockstars were heroes!
  3. ^ Troy Culpan (12 March 2012). "Leeno Dee of Melody Black". May the Rock Be with You. Retrieved 21 April 2018. We caught up once again with primary songwriter, bass player and stalwart in the rock world of Australia, Leeno Dee
  4. ^ Denis Gray (19 February 2015). "Australian Rock Show: Episode 7 - Leeno Dee". Retrieved 21 April 2018. ...Dee has been plugging his loud, thunderous bass into the Australian music scene for some time
  5. ^ Denis Gray (3 August 2010). "Rockbrat Chat: The Leeno Dee Interview". ...JERK was definitely something I was and still am proud to have done. We made a great album, and I guess doing shows with Insane Clown Posse, Killing Joke and Marilyn Manson are highlights. Being guests at Ozzfest was a highlight and also doing the red carpet at the ARIAs.
  6. ^ Australian Gothic Industrial Music (2015). "Jerk: Industrial-Metal band from Sydney". Retrieved 21 April 2018. Formed in Sydney 2000, JERK were an explosive and intense Industrial-Metal Heavy Rock band.
  7. ^ Dino Scatena (20 September 2003). "How to spot the next big thing". Sydney Morning Herald. Sony's metal act Jerk drops by to show off the band's new video.
  8. ^ "The ARIA Report" (PDF). Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). 25 November 2002. pp. 2, 4, 7, 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 January 2003. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
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