American heavy metal singer
Dee Snider
|
---|
|
|
Birth name
| Daniel Snider
|
---|
Born
| (
1955-03-15
)
March 15, 1955
(age 69)
New York City, U.S.
|
---|
Genres
| |
---|
Occupation(s)
| - Singer
- songwriter
- actor
- radio personality
- television personality
|
---|
Years active
| 1974?present
|
---|
Member of
| |
---|
Formerly of
| |
---|
|
Website
| deesnider
.com
|
---|
Musical artist
Daniel Snider
[1]
(born March 15, 1955) is an American musician, best known as the lead singer and songwriter of the
heavy metal
band
Twisted Sister
. The band's song "
We're Not Gonna Take It
" reached No. 21 on the
Billboard
Hot 100
singles chart and was ranked No. 47 on 100 Greatest 80's Songs. Snider later formed and was the lead singer in the heavy metal bands
Desperado
,
Widowmaker
, and SMFs (Sick Mother Fuckers). He also released several solo albums. Snider was ranked #83 in the
Hit Parader
'
s Top 100 Metal Vocalists of All Time.
[2]
Early life
[
edit
]
Born in
Astoria, Queens
, New York City, on March 15, 1955,
[1]
[3]
Snider was raised in nearby
Freeport, New York
and
Baldwin, New York
,
[1]
[4]
both on
Long Island
. His father, Bob, is a retired New York State Trooper and
Nassau County
court clerk, and his mother, Marguerite, is a retired art teacher.
[5]
His father is
Jewish
, whereas his mother is from a
Catholic
family of Swiss descent.
[6]
He is also of Ukrainian descent from his grandfather.
[7]
Snider and his siblings were raised as
Episcopalians
after his mother joined the church.
[6]
As a child, he sang in a church choir, several school choruses, and concert choir in high school. Snider was selected for the All-State Chorus for singing.
[8]
He was graduated from
Baldwin Senior High School
in 1973.
[9]
Career
[
edit
]
1970s?1980s
[
edit
]
In early 1976, Snider joined
Twisted Sister
and became the band's sole songwriter. The group released their first studio album,
Under the Blade
, in September 1982 and developed a following in the UK. Less than a year later, Twisted Sister released their second album,
You Can't Stop Rock 'n' Roll
. Their third album,
Stay Hungry
, hit shelves on May 10, 1984. This became the band's most successful record with the hits "
We're Not Gonna Take It
" and "
I Wanna Rock
". "We're Not Gonna Take It" reached No. 21 on the
Billboard
Hot 100
singles chart, and was ranked No. 47 on 100 Greatest 80's Songs. To emphasize the "twisted sister" image, Snider adopted a trademark persona of metal-inspired
drag
with long blond curly hair, an excessive amount of
eye shadow
and
rouge
, a
beauty mark
, and bright red
lipstick
.
[10]
[11]
During the mid-1980s, before the premiere of
Headbangers Ball
, the first
MTV
program to consist entirely of heavy metal videos was
Heavy Metal Mania
. The first episode aired in June 1985 and was hosted by Snider. It featured metal news, interviews with metal artists, and in-studio co-hosts. That same year, in November, Twisted Sister released
Come Out and Play
, which sold more than 500,000 copies in the USA.
[12]
In 1985, Snider was involved in a Senate hearing instigated by the
Parents Music Resource Center
(PMRC), which sought to introduce a parental warning system that would label all albums containing what they considered offensive material. Prior to the appearance by PMRC in Congress, they had singled out a list of songs entitled the "Filthy Fifteen" to demonstrate the dangers of such material to youth, with "We're Not Gonna Take It" featuring on the list alongside
Prince
's "
Darling Nikki
",
Madonna
's "
Dress You Up
", and
Venom
's "
Possessed
", among other titles. The PMRC proposed a system involving letters that identified the types of objectionable content they determined to be found in each album (e.g., "O" for occult themes, "X" for sex and profanity, "D/A" for drugs and alcohol, "V" for violence, etc.). Snider,
John Denver
, and
Frank Zappa
all testified against censorship and the proposed warning system.
[13]
The system was never implemented, and the music industry had already adopted what is now the generic "
Parental Advisory: Explicit Content
" label.
[14]
The PMRC involved prominent public figures such as
Tipper Gore
, the then-wife of Senator
Al Gore
(D-TN), and Susan Baker, the wife of then-Secretary of State
James Baker
. Tipper Gore and Snider had a publicly antagonistic relationship as a consequence, with Snider accusing her of having a "dirty mind" for alleging that the lyrics of "
Under the Blade
" contained
sadomasochistic
undertones, when in fact, they were about
medical surgery
.
[15]
Snider also alleged during the Senate hearing that Tipper Gore had fabricated evidence concerning merchandise sold by the band when she stated that "the t-shirts that kids wear" featured "Twisted Sister and a woman in handcuffs sort of spread-eagled".
[16]
Snider challenged her to produce such a shirt, to which Al Gore clarified that "the word 't-shirts' was in plural, and one of them referred to Twisted Sister and the other referred to a woman in handcuffs".
[17]
[18]
The fifth Twisted Sister album was
Love Is for Suckers
(1987). The record was originally planned to have been a Snider solo effort, but
Atlantic Records
encouraged a release under the Twisted Sister name. Touring lasted only into October 1987, and on October 12, 1987, Snider announced his departure from the band. It was during this time that Snider formed
Desperado
, a band featuring ex-
Iron Maiden
drummer
Clive Burr
, ex-
Gillan
guitarist
Bernie Torme
, and bassist Marc Russel.
[19]
The group's only album,
Ace
, has never been officially released, but was heavily
bootlegged
on CD under the title
Bloodied, but Unbowed
.
[20]
[21]
[22]
1990s
[
edit
]
In the 1990s, Snider formed
Widowmaker
with guitarist
Al Pitrelli
, bassist Marc Russel, and former Twisted Sister drummer
Joey Franco
. The quartet recorded two albums with limited underground success, titled
Blood and Bullets
and
Stand By for Pain
. In the late 1990s, Snider toured with a "self-tribute" band called
Dee Snider's SMFs
(Sick Mother Fuckers), sometimes featuring ex-Twisted Sister drummer
A.J. Pero
. The usual lineup included Snider, Derek Tailer, Charlie Mills,
Keith Alexander
, and Spike.
[23]
In 1993, Snider composed the theme song for
The Terrible Thunderlizards
. By 1994, Snider had, by his own admission: "...lost every penny I made. I was riding a bicycle to a desk job for $200 a week answering phones in an office." (equivalent to $411 in 2023)
[15]
In 1997, Snider began hosting
The House of Hair
, a syndicated 1980s hard rock/heavy metal radio show on more than 200 radio stations across North America. It is syndicated by the
United Stations Radio Networks
. The show's format runs two or three hours depending on which version of the show a radio station carries and features Snider's closing catchphrase: "If it ain't metal, it's crap!"
[24]
In 1998, Snider penned a song entitled "The Magic of Christmas Day (God Bless Us Everyone)", which
Celine Dion
recorded for her album
These Are Special Times
. According to Snider, Dion at the time was not aware of who wrote the song. Later that year, he also wrote and starred in the
horror film
Strangeland
. Snider also penned
[
when?
]
the script to a sequel with the working title of
Strangeland: Disciple
.
[25]
[26]
As of January 2008, however, Snider was less than optimistic that
Disciple
would ever see the light of day, saying in an interview with Bullz-Eye.com that he had reached a point where he should: "...put a sign on my website that says, 'Y'got ten million dollars? Give me a call. I've got the script ready to go. Robert Englund's attached, I'm attached. If somebody's serious and wants to make it, call me. But don't call me 'til you're ready to hand the check over.
'
"
[27]
In May 2009, Snider revealed on his radio show "The House of Hair" that
Strangeland: Rising Sons
would go ahead and was set to begin shooting in the fall of 2009 and would be slated for a 2010 release.
[28]
2000?2009
[
edit
]
From June 1999 to August 2003, Snider hosted a morning radio show on a
Hartford, Connecticut
Clear Channel
station, Radio 104 (104.1 FM
WMRQ
), called
Dee Snider Radio
. His show returned to the air at night in August 2004 on 93.3
WMMR
in
Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania until June 2005. He fondly referred to his listeners as his "Peeps", and "DEE" euro stickers, printed by the station, could be seen on the bumpers of his fans' cars throughout
Connecticut
, New York,
New Jersey
, and
Massachusetts
. Other members of the morning show included Nick Lentino, Beth Lockwood, "Psycho Dan" Williams, Sean Robbins, and "Darkside Dave" Wallace.
[29]
He frequently featured high-profile guests, including
Ozzy Osbourne
, pro wrestler
Mick Foley
, and
Kiss
singer/bassist
Gene Simmons
.
[28]
In 2001, Snider was the voice of Gol Acheron, the main villain for the
PlayStation 2
video game
Jak and Daxter: The Precursor Legacy
. The following year, he rejoined with the reunited Twisted Sister. Snider also played himself in the 2002 TV-movie
Warning: Parental Advisory
. In 2003, he appeared with actor
Arnold Schwarzenegger
at campaign events during his drive to recall incumbent California Governor
Gray Davis
. Snider sang the Twisted Sister hit "
We're Not Gonna Take It
", which was adopted by the Schwarzenegger campaign.
[30]
Snider voiced Angry Jack in the episode "Shell Shocked" for the
Nickelodeon
cartoon
SpongeBob SquarePants
. He admitted to being a massive fan of the show during an hour-long 10th anniversary documentary of the show in 2009, stating that to be asked to voice a character on the show was an absolute honor. He changed the lyrics of his famous "I Wanna Rock" to "Goofy Goober Rock" for
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie
.
[31]
Snider has narrated and hosted many shows and specials on
VH1
, film trailers, behind-the-scenes segments, and DVD special features. He was featured as the "voice" in the bumpers for
MSNBC
's 2001/2002 "Fiercely Independent" branding campaign.
[23]
In 2003, Snider collaborated on a Halloween-themed project called
Van Helsing's Curse
. The project's first album,
Oculus Infernum
, was released by
Koch Records
and featured a blend of heavy metal and orchestral elements in the style of
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
.
[32]
The band began touring in 2004 and later released a DVD of the concert entitled
Live in Philly '05
.
[33]
Snider returned to radio in June 2006 with
Fangoria
Radio on
Sirius Satellite Radio
channel 102 from 9?12 Eastern.
[34]
Snider hosted VH1's 2008 "Aftermath" concert in remembrance of the victims and survivors of the 2003
Station nightclub fire
. During the winter of 2008, Snider was featured as a contestant on
CMT
's
Gone Country
. The show invited musical celebrities to compete against each other to win the chance to release a country song. In 2008 Snider also appeared on the first episode of
Kitchen Nightmares
(Season 2), chosen by
Gordon Ramsay
as part of the marketing for the re-launch of the Handlebar restaurant. On the show, Snider donated a motorcycle on which Handlebar clientele could bid via the restaurant's website.
[35]
Snider has hosted
[
when?
]
Dead Art
on Gallery HD, a show about cemeteries' beauty and art.
[36]
Snider has also hosted
[
when?
]
House of Hair
, a radio show that plays heavy metal music. Snider has made appearances on the
IFC
Channel's original series
Z Rock
as himself playing the character of a "rock guru".
[
citation needed
]
2010?2019
[
edit
]
On July 27, 2010, Snider and his family began appearing in the reality television show
Growing Up Twisted
,
airing on the
Arts and Entertainment Network
.
[37]
On October 8, 2010, Snider started an 11-week run in the cast of
Rock of Ages
as Dennis, the owner of The Bourbon Room, with his official start date being October 11.
[38]
In 2011, Snider performed with Ohio-based metalcore band
Attack Attack!
on stage at the
Bamboozle Festival
playing their song "Turbo Swag". On the May 15, 2011 episode of
The Apprentice
, Snider appeared to assist
John Rich
with his final challenge. He starred in a commercial featuring a mock audition where he came on as himself, and after drinking a soda turns into the lead singer from Twisted Sister (himself). Snider agreed to come because he is personal friends with Rich and wanted to support the charity effort for
St. Jude Medical Center
.
[39]
Snider guest starred in the video for "Immaculate Misconception" by the metalcore band
Motionless in White
.
[40]
Snider's son, Cody Blue Snider, directed the video.
[41]
Snider and his family appeared on
Celebrity Wife Swap
January 10, 2012. His wife Suzette traded places with
Flavor Flav
's long-time fiancee Liz.
[42]
On the
Valentine's Day
2012 taping of
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
, Snider partnered with
Donald Trump
in a skit based upon the format of the TV game show,
Password
. On February 19, 2012, Snider began appearing as one of 18 contestants vying to become Trump's next
Celebrity Apprentice
and was fired after the eighth task during the seventh episode.
[43]
In 2012, Snider appeared as the main character of a commercial airing for the company
Unibet
. The video
[44]
has been broadcast on commercial Norwegian television from March 5, 2012, through the whole summer. In the spot Snider sings, in his distinctive look as leader of Twisted Sister, a rock song called "Bet", written by Snider himself and composed by the Norwegian heavy metal artist
Ronni Le Tekrø
.
[45]
Snider asked Republican vice presidential running mate
Paul Ryan
's camp not to play his hit song in their campaign.
[46]
On September 6, 2012, Snider performed "We're Not Gonna Take It" on
America's Got Talent
. Also in 2012, Snider played Larry, the owner of a dive bar in the mockumentary
Future Folk
[47]
about an alien bluegrass band.
[48]
On January 24, 2013, at the City National Grove of Anaheim, Snider was honored as roastee at the
Revolver Magazine
/
Guitar World
Rock and Roll Roast of Dee Snider.
[49]
On November 4, 2014, Snider debuted his original Christmas musical,
Dee Snider's Rock and Roll Christmas Tale
, at the
Broadway Playhouse
in Chicago.
[50]
During the 2015 Christmas season, he took the musical to Toronto.
[51]
Snider provided the narration for
Attack of Life: The Bang Tango Movie
, which is a documentary film directed by
Drew Fortier
about the 1980s hard rock band
Bang Tango
.
[52]
[53]
2020?present
[
edit
]
On May 27, 2021, Snider announced his new upcoming solo album
Leave A Scar
. He also released the single "I Gotta Rock (Again)" which he described as the "driving motivation" and "starting gun for this album".
[54]
Leave A Scar
will be produced by
Jamey Jasta
, the lead singer of the band
Hatebreed
, with mixing and mastering done by Nick Bellmore.
[55]
The album features guest appearances by
Cannibal Corpse
's singer
Corpsegrinder
on the track "Time To Choose". Music videos were released for the songs "I Gotta Rock (Again)", "Down But Never Out", and "Time To Choose".
[56]
The album was released on July 30, 2021.
[57]
In 2023, Snider competed in
season nine
of
The Masked Singer
as "Doll".
[58]
After besting
George Wendt
as "Moose" and Christine Quinn of
Selling Sunsets
as "Scorpio" on "'80s Night", he was eliminated on "WB Movie Night". Snider also did "We're Not Gonna Take It" as an encore.
[59]
Uses of "We're Not Gonna Take It"
[
edit
]
On July 11, 2013, after abortion rights activists sang "
We're Not Gonna Take It
" to protest legal restrictions on
abortion in Texas
,
[60]
Snider tweeted that he is "
pro-choice
",
[61]
and that he did not believe that being Christian and "pro-choice" were mutually exclusive of one another.
[62]
In 2016, Snider recorded a piano ballad version of "We're Not Gonna Take It" for
Criss Angel
's charity HELP (Heal Every Life Angel Possible) to raise money for pediatric cancer treatment and research. Angel directed the video.
[63]
In the wake of teachers' strikes in West Virginia and Oklahoma, Snider dedicated "We're Not Gonna Take It" to teachers during his "Rocktopia" performance at the Broadway Theatre in New York on April 9, 2018.
[64]
The song had become an anthem for protesting teachers in West Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma and elsewhere, and Snider had tweeted his "support [of the] underpaid teacher's cause" after seeing a video of music teachers in Oklahoma performing the song.
[64]
In 2021, Snider objected to the use of the song by demonstrators in Fort Lauderdale protesting
face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
.
[65]
During the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
, Snider approved the use of "We're Not Gonna Take It" by the Ukrainians.
[66]
People are asking me why I endorsed the use of 'We're Not Gonna Take It' for the Ukrainian people and did not for the anti-maskers. Well, one use is for a righteous battle against oppression; the other is infantile feet stomping against an inconvenience.
[66]
In November 2023, when asked after the
2023 Hamas attack on Israel
whether he was okay with
Israeli soldiers
using his band's "We're Not Gonna Take It" as a battle cry, Snider replied:
"Oh, hell yeah. You know what? Israelis, the assault on the Israelis, people are losing sight of something. People saying that, 'Oh, the response is gonna be too intense for what happened.' Well, you don't get to decide on the response when you do heinous things to civilians. You don't get to say, 'Oh, that's enough, that's enough retaliation.' No, it doesn't work like that. When you cross that line, you're burning people, you're slaughtering people, you're raping people, you're just killing people, after what happened at that festival you don't get to say, 'Okay, your revenge can be this much.' No. Payback's a mothereffer. And I come from that school. You cross that line, you know… Sh*t's gonna happen. Sing it out, boys."
[67]
[68]
[69]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Snider has been married to his wife Suzette, a costume designer, since 1981.
[70]
They have four children,
Jesse Blaze Snider
(born September 19, 1982), Shane Royal Snider (born February 29, 1988), Cody Blue Snider (born December 7, 1989), and Cheyenne Jean Snider (born October 31, 1996) who was in the band They All Float. He also has four grandchildren.
In the 1985 Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) Senate hearings, Snider stated: "I was born and raised a Christian, and I still adhere to those principles."
[71]
In 2003, Snider's brother-in-law, Vincent Gargiulo, was murdered.
[72]
The killer was apprehended in 2009.
Snider lived part-time in
East Setauket, New York
.
[73]
He appeared on
MTV Cribs
in 2005 to show his
Long Island
home, along with two of his four children, Shane and Cheyenne.
In 2008, he stated in a TMZ interview that he would be voting for
Barack Obama
because
John McCain
(whom he liked and supported for many years) would not acknowledge the mistakes
George W. Bush
had made while in office.
[74]
Projects
[
edit
]
Books
[
edit
]
In 1987, Snider and co-author Philip Bashe published
Dee Snider's Teenage Survival Guide
, a
self-help
manual for adolescence.
[75]
His autobiography,
Shut Up and Give Me the Mic
, was published in 2012.
[76]
He wrote
We're Not Gonna Take It
, a children's book illustrated by Margaret McCartney, which was published in 2020.
[77]
In 2022, a graphic novel collaboration between Snider, writer Frank Marraffino, and artist Steve Kurth, was announced by
Z2 Comics
,
[78]
scheduled for publication in 2023.
[79]
Bands
[
edit
]
- Twisted Sister
(Disbanded 2016)
- Desperado
- Widowmaker
- Bent Brother (Twisted Sister occasionally made small tours around the world, in full makeup, and previous to those performances, performed as Bent Brother, practicing their set and appearing without makeup, usually at reduced ticket prices)
- Van Helsing's Curse
(2004)
Discography
[
edit
]
Solo albums
[
edit
]
Guest appearances
[
edit
]
Tribute albums
[
edit
]
Soundtracks
[
edit
]
Other works
[
edit
]
TV appearances
[
edit
]
- "Saigon Suicide Show"; an episode of the television show
The Upright Citizens Brigade
, 1998
- VH1
's
I love the...
series, 2002?2004
- Appeared on
Chappelle's Show
on
Comedy Central
, season 1 episode 6 as part of the "Ask a Gay Dude ? with
Mario Cantone
" skit; aired February 26, 2003
- "Handlebar"; an episode of the television show
Kitchen Nightmares
, 2008
- "
Episode#1.7
"; an episode of the television show
Z Rock
(ZO2), 2008
- Monster Circus live at the
Las Vegas Hilton
March 19?21 and 26?28, 2009
- "
I Wanna Rock
" on
America's Got Talent
, 2010
- Celebrity Apprentice
May 15, 2011
- He played a regular supporting role as character Lance Rocket in the
FEARnet
horror-comedy series
Holliston
from 2012-2013.
- RadioShack
: "
The '80s Called
"
(2014)
[82]
- Counting Cars
(2016?2017) ? appeared in person in three episodes
- AXS TV
'
s
Top Ten Revealed
, (2018?present)
[83]
[84]
- Cobra Kai
(2021) - Appeared as himself at a concert two of the characters visit. He performs "I Wanna Rock".
- Celebrity Family Feud
(2021)
[85]
- The Masked Singer
(4/5/2023) as Herself/Doll (season 9 contestant)
- Metal Family (Animated series) (2018?present)
Radio appearances
[
edit
]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Voice-over work
[
edit
]
Bibliography
[
edit
]
- Dee Snider's Teenage Survival Guide
with Philip Bashe, 1987, Dolphin/Doubleday
- Shut Up and Give Me the Mic: a twisted memoir
, 2012, Gallery Books
- We're Not Gonna Take It: A Children's Picture Book
, 2020, Akashic Books
- Dee Snider: He's Not Gonna Take It
with Frank Marraffino and Steve Kurth, 2023, Z2 Comics
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Tayler, Letta,
Twisted Sister's Dee Snider remembers his challenging Long Island upbringing
, "
Newsday
", March 15, 2016.
Archived here
- ^
"Hit Parader's Top 100 Metal Vocalists of All Time"
.
Hearya.com
. December 4, 2006. Archived from
the original
on May 29, 2012
. Retrieved
January 20,
2017
.
- ^
"Dee Snider Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More ..."
AllMusic
. Retrieved
June 7,
2024
.
- ^
Snider, Dee [@deesnider] (September 22, 2015).
"Freeport and Baldwin Long Island. Born in Astoria Queens, NY"
(
Tweet
). Archived from
the original
on March 1, 2022 – via
Twitter
.
- ^
Fischler, Marcelle S. (January 11, 2004).
"Long Island Journal: Once a Twisted Sister Now a Homebody"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
January 20,
2017
.
- ^
a
b
Snider, Dee (2012).
Dee Snider's Shut Up and Give Me the Mic
. pp. 17?18.
- ^
Snider, Dee [@deesnider] (February 26, 2022).
"I absolutely approve of Ukrainians using 'We're Not Gonna Take It' as their battlecry. My grandfather was Ukrainian, before it was swallowed up by the USSR after WW2. This can't happen to these people again!"
(
Tweet
)
. Retrieved
May 16,
2022
– via
Twitter
.
- ^
"Dee Snider"
.
Newsday.com
. August 18, 2004. Archived from
the original
on August 18, 2004.
- ^
"Sounding Off in Suburbia"
.
Newsday
. June 6, 2004. Archived from
the original
on June 6, 2004.
- ^
"Too rough for Texas"
.
Newsday
. October 10, 1984. p. 9.
- ^
Dunkin, Zach (August 30, 1984).
"Twisted Sister Brings Back Era of 'Glitter Rock'
"
.
The Indianapolis News
. p. 32.
- ^
"Gold & Platinum"
.
RIAA
.
- ^
"Flashback: The Time Congress Tried To Shut Down Dee Snider But He Had Other Plans"
.
Society of Rock
. July 15, 2016.
- ^
Grow, Kory (September 18, 2015).
"Dee Snider on PMRC Hearing: 'I Was a Public Enemy'
"
.
Rolling Stone
.
- ^
a
b
Grow, Kory (September 18, 2015).
"Dee Snider on PMRC Hearing: 'I Was a Public Enemy'
"
.
Rolling Stone
. Retrieved
May 27,
2021
.
- ^
"When Dee Snider fought against censorship in the '80s"
. October 29, 2020
. Retrieved
December 18,
2021
.
- ^
McPadden 9/21/2015, Mike.
"6.66 Heavy Metal Highlights of the PMRC Hearings"
.
VH1 News
.
Archived
from the original on May 25, 2022
. Retrieved
December 18,
2021
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link
)
- ^
"Committee On Commerce, Science, And Transportation"
.
Joesapt.net
. Retrieved
December 18,
2021
.
- ^
"About Desperado"
.
Deesnider.com
. Archived from
the original
on April 6, 2009
. Retrieved
April 12,
2009
.
- ^
Kielty, Martin (March 26, 2023).
"The Single Word That Killed Dee Snider's Best Album"
.
Ultimate Classic Rock
.
- ^
"Dee Snider | Desperado"
.
- ^
"Desperado biography"
.
Last.fm
.
- ^
a
b
"Dee Snider age, hometown, biography"
.
Last.fm
.
- ^
"The House of Hair with Dee Snider"
.
House of Hair with Dee Snider
.
- ^
Jenkins, Jason (July 23, 2021).
"
'Strangeland: Disciple' ? Dee Snider Updates on the Planned Return of Captain Howdy [Phantom Limbs]"
.
- ^
"Dee Snider Says 'Now is the Time' for Strangeland 2!"
. February 28, 2017.
- ^
"A Chat with Dee Snider, Dee Snider interview, Twisted Sister, "Gone Country"
"
.
www.bullz-eye.com
.
- ^
a
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'All-Star Celebrity Apprentice': Dee Snider on His Biggest Regret, Busey and the Boardroom"
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'The Masked Singer' Reveals Identity of the Doll: Here's Who It is"
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External links
[
edit
]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Dee Snider
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