Lee_Aaron

Lee Aaron

Lee Aaron

Canadian rock singer (born 1962)


Lee Aaron (born Karen Lynn Greening; July 21, 1962) is a Canadian rock singer.[5] She had several hits in the 1980s and early 1990s, such as "Metal Queen", "Whatcha Do to My Body", and "Sex with Love".[6]

Quick Facts Background information, Birth name ...

Early life

Aaron was born as Karen Lynn Greening in Belleville, Ontario,[7] and began singing in school musicals at the age of five. She attended high school in Brampton, Ontario.

At age seventeen, Aaron was in a car accident. No surgery was required, but she did suffer a broken nose and badly bruised her face. However, years later Canadian Musician Magazine mistakenly embellished the incident into Aaron requiring complete facial reconstruction.[8][9] The magazine printed a retraction in the following month's issue.[10]

Career

After singing in a music production when she was fifteen years old, she was asked to join a local rock group, which the members including Karen would name "Lee Aaron". The members placed random names into a hat and drawn by the young musicians. [11] She sang, played alto saxophone and keyboards in this first incarnation of the band, and took on the stage name of Lee Aaron.

1980s

Aaron recorded her debut album, The Lee Aaron Project, in 1982 on Freedom Records;[5] it was later reissued on Attic. The album featured well-known musicians of the Toronto music scene, including members of Moxy, Rif Raf3 (Q107 Homegrown Vol 4 / Lee Aaron Project band), Santers, and Triumph's Rik Emmett.[12] Although the album was available in the UK only as an import, Aaron was invited to appear later that year at the Reading Festival.

In late 1982, Aaron flew to New York and posed topless for the men's magazine OUI.[9] The magazine's March 1983 issue featured Aaron on the cover and in an interview. Aaron later concluded that posing for the magazine damaged her musical credibility;[5] she regretted the decision and assigned blame for it to pressure from her manager.[13]

1984's recording of the album Metal Queen resulted in a multi-album deal with Attic Records.[5] During the recording of Metal Queen, guitarist John Albani (ex-Wrabit)[14] joined the band and he and Aaron formed a solid songwriting partnership that lasted eleven years.[5]

Between 1984 and 1992, Aaron toured extensively through Europe and made appearances in Japan and the United States. She released six albums on Attic Records in Canada and international releases in the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Benelux, Italy, Scandinavia, Australia and Japan. She won three Toronto Music Awards for Best Female Vocalist and was nominated for Juno awards sixteen times.[15] She amassed zero wins. [16] Her 1985 album Call Of The Wild featured her well-known rock ballad "Barely Holdin On".

Her most commercially successful album was Bodyrock, released in 1989.[5] The album included several hit songs, including "Whatcha Do to My Body", and was certified double platinum in Canada.[17]

1990s

In 1992, Aaron left Attic Records to start her label, Hip Chic Music, and released two more albums. On 1994's Emotional Rain (distributed by A & M Canada), Aaron recorded with Don Short and Don Binns (Sons of Freedom), Reeves Gabrels (David Bowie's Tin Machine), and Knox Chandler (the Psychedelic Furs).

1995's 2preciious was a project record written with members of Sons of Freedom, in which she dropped the name "Lee Aaron" entirely and used her real name, Karen. Neither of these recordings was commercially successful, and shortly afterwards, the Sons broke up.[18]

Aaron studied acting for a year before beginning to perform jazz and blues in Toronto with Dennis Ziebart.[18]

2000s

Aaron in 2017

In 2000, Aaron released a jazz album, Slick Chick, on her imprint, Barking Dog Music, with distribution by Fusion 3.[18] She performed extensively in support of this release, showcasing at The Top of the Senator in Toronto and various jazz festivals across Canada and Europe.

In 2002, Aaron was approached to audition with the Modern Baroque Opera Company. She was cast and appeared that year in an ALCAN Performing Arts Award-winning production called 101 Songs for the Marquis De Sade.

Her eleventh album, Beautiful Things, a pop-jazz hybrid, was released in 2004.

Aaron continued to play rock and selected jazz shows; in 2011 she made her first appearance in Sweden at the Sweden Rock Festival.[19]

In March, 2016, Lee Aaron released her first all-rock album in 20 years. Self-financed and released on her own Big Sister Records, the new album was entitled Fire And Gasoline.[20] Later that year she was inducted into the Brampton Arts Walk Of Fame.[12] She then went on to appear at the Rockingham 2016 melodic/hard rock festival in Nottingham, United Kingdom.[21]

In 2017, Lee Aaron played a number of shows in Germany as well as an appearance at Bang Your Head Festivals and two separate gigs in London and Wolverhampton.[22]

Discography

Lee Aaron performing at the Kitchener Blues Festival

Albums

More information Year, Album ...

Compilations

  • 1992: Powerline: The Best of Lee Aaron, Attic
  • 2005: Museum: Videos, Clips and More 1997–2005
  • 2008: Rarities, Studio & Live: 1981–2008
  • 2012: Live in Sweden (DVD)
  • 2012: Radio Hitz and More...

Singles

More information Year, Single ...

References

  1. Dillon, Charlotte. "Lee Aaron". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  2. Miller, Glenn. "Lee Aaron – Lee Aaron". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  3. Aaron, Lee (2022). "Biography". leeaaron.com. Retrieved October 6, 2022. I realized (after stepping away from rock for a few years) that embracing my past doesn't have to prevent me from moving into the future. Plus, I really missed picking up a guitar and rocking out.
  4. Aaron, Lee (2022). "Vintage Live". leeaaron.com. Retrieved October 6, 2022.
  5. "Lee Aaron: From Metal Queen to Rockin' Mom". Observer, By Bryan Reesman • 08/23/16
  6. Canadian Musician. Norris Publications. April 1987. ISSN 0708-9635.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  7. "CANOE JAM! Music - Pop Encyclopedia - Aaron, Lee". Jam.Canoe.ca. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved 2009-02-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. Canadian Musician. Norris Publications. May 1987. ISSN 0708-9635.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (link)
  9. "Lee Aaron Biography And History". metallian. 27 June 2011. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  10. "Lee Aaron: Portrait Of A Survivor". FYI Music News, Sep 29, 2016 by Kerry Doole
  11. "Lee Aaron interview". Full In Bloom Music.com. Retrieved 2009-07-05.
  12. "Wrabit Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More". AllMusic. Retrieved 2023-02-07.
  13. "Lee Aaron Bio". metallian. 27 June 2023. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  14. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. "Metal Queen Aaron takes Detour". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.; 24 June 2000. ISSN 0006-2510. p. 97–.
  15. Begai, Carl. "LEE AARON – Back On The Rock N' Roll Radar". Bravewords. Retrieved 15 June 2016.
  16. "Rockingham United Festival". Review by Kimmo Toivonen, October 2016.
  17. "Lee Aaron live @ The Underworld in London". overland metalhead. 20 July 2017. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
  18. Lee Aaron (2021-05-28). Lee Aaron - C'mon official video (Music video). Canada: LeeAaronTV. Retrieved 2021-05-31. The lead-off single and video from Lee Aaron's new album, Radio On! available worldwide on July 23, 2021

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