Origin Wolverhampton, England Name Dee Palmer Occupation(s) Arranger, musician Role Composer | Years active 1967–present | |
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Movies Jethro Tull: Classic Artists Albums Heavy Horses, Symphonic Music of Yes, Songs from the Wood, Bursting Out, Objects of Fantasy (The Musi |
A Symphonic Tribute to Queen- Dee Palmer live at The Royal Festival Hall, 1997 promo.
Dee Palmer, formerly David Palmer (London, 2 July 1937), is an English composer, arranger, and keyboardist best known for having been a member of the progressive rock group Jethro Tull from 1977 to 1980.
Contents
- A Symphonic Tribute to Queen Dee Palmer live at The Royal Festival Hall 1997 promo
- Ian Anderson and Dee Palmer At The 2001 Itullians Convention
- Early career
- Jethro Tull and other works
- Gender transition
- With Jethro Tull
- Symphonic arrangements
- References

Ian Anderson and Dee Palmer At The 2001 Itullians Convention
Early career

Palmer studied composition at the Royal Academy of Music with Richard Rodney Bennett, winning the Eric Coates Prize and The Boosey and Hawkes Prize and during her studentship taught clarinet to second study students. She was appointed a Fellow of The Royal Academy of Music in 1994.
Jethro Tull and other works
Going about her early career as a jobbing arranger and conductor of recording sessions, Palmer recorded her first album project, Nicola, in 1967 with Bert Jansch. She was then referred to Terry Ellis, then manager of the early Jethro Tull, which was making its first album at Sound Techniques Studio in Chelsea, London. At short notice, Palmer came up with arrangements for the horns and strings on the Mick Abrahams composition, "Move on Alone" from the This Was album. This work and professional performance endeared her to the band and she was soon to visit them again, with a string quartet arrangement to "A Christmas Song". Palmer arranged string, brass, and woodwind parts for Jethro Tull songs in the late 1960s and early 1970s, before formally joining the group in 1976 and primarily playing electronic keyboard instruments. In 1980, leader Ian Anderson intended to release the album A with other musicians as a solo project, but was persuaded by his record label to release it instead under the Jethro Tull name. This resulted in every member of the group, including Palmer, leaving except guitarist Martin Barre and Anderson himself. Palmer formed a new group, Tallis, with former Jethro Tull pianist and organist John Evan. The new group was not commercially successful, and Palmer returned to film scoring and sessions.
Beginning in the 1980s, Palmer produced several albums of orchestral arrangements of the music of various rock groups, including Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes, the Beatles and Queen.
Gender transition
In 1998, Palmer came out as transgender and intersex, changing her name to Dee. Palmer was born with genital ambiguity, assigned male at birth, and underwent several surgeries, the last in her late twenties. Palmer said her gender dysphoria had been a part of her life since she'd been young, and that the dysphoria "started to reassert itself again" in the year following the death of her wife Maggie in 1995.