Lenny Dee (DJ)

Lenny Dee (born 1968) is the performing name of Leonard Didesiderio, a DJ based in New York City. Starting as a house DJ in the 1980s, Dee quickly moved towards harder sounds such as techno and gabber. He set up the well respected record label Industrial Strength in 1991.

Early life

Leonard Didesiderio was born in 1968. He grew up in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn and became a DJ in his teens, when he started working at the local roller disco.[1] Taking the DJ name Lenny Dee, he made his first record in 1985.[2] He started playing house music and developed a rivalry with Frankie Bones, another young DJ.[1] Tommy Musto told the two to work together and they started music under the name Looney Tunes.[3] Their first record sold 15,000 copies and they were invited to England to play at raves. When he travelled through Europe, playing at dance parties in Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany, Dee's style became harder and faster. He started making techno and gabber.[1]

Career

Not having trained as a musician, Dee taught himself to DJ and produce records. He began to work as a production assistant for Arthur Baker and later produced sample collections of loops. Having started DJing with vinyl, Dee later moved to using Pro Tools.[2] Dee has played at many venues worldwide and at festivals such as Electric Daisy Carnival, Love Parade and Tomorrowland.[4] He played at the 25th anniversary party of Thunderdome in 2017.[5]

Industrial Strength Records

Lenny Dee founded Industrial Strength Records in 1991.[1] The first release was a double A side from Marc Acardipane, whom Dee met when he was stranded after playing at a rave in Frankfurt. Arcadipane offered him a place to stay and played him some tracks. Dee promised to release them, then IS001 became "We Have Arrived" by Mescalanium United and "Nightflight (Non-Stop To Kaos)" by The Mover (both artist names being pseudonyms of Arcadipane).[6] Industrial Strength released records from Dee himself and amongst others Thomas Bangalter, Ralphie Dee and Nasenbluten.[1]

gollark: Yes, the backdoors are embedded in Opus OS itself.
gollark: It's *probably* fine either way, since these aren't coplanar.
gollark: I was using the standard one before, but it accidentally went across a chunk boundary, and this was easier than moving everything.
gollark: One computer drives a bunch of modems with different positions to do trilateration.
gollark: Things like the GTech™ nether monitoring base™ also use one-computer™ technology.

References

  1. Matos, Michaelangelos (29 September 2011). "Q&A: Industrial Strength's Lenny Dee On Distorting Electronic Instruments, Sampling Pantera, And "Draft Ponk"". www.villagevoice.com. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  2. "Interview With Lenny Dee - DJ, Producer And Head Of Industrial Strength". www.loopmasters.com. Archived from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  3. Reynolds, Simon. Generation ecstasy : into the world of techno and rave culture. Routledge. p. 145. ISBN 9781136783173.
  4. "RA: Lenny Dee". Resident Advisor. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  5. Dicker, Holly. "Thunderdome: 25 years of hardcore". Resident Advisor. Archived from the original on 28 May 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  6. Reynolds, Simon (27 April 2018). "The Mover Goes Back to the Future". www.villagevoice.com. Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
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