From Matawan, New Jersey, Holmes grew up singing in a gospel family. Later the Jersey Shore singer performed with choirs and girl groups. In the 1960s and the 1970s, she performed with a number of rock bands, including Hot Ice, with fellow Springsteen back-up singer Barbara Dinkins. She sang with a number of Shore bands and was also a member of Gabrielle Roth's group, The Mirrors, for several years. Holmes also recorded or performed backgrounds for many artists and producers, including Garry Tallent, Danny Federici, Bill Chinnock, Neal Coty, Steve Delopoulos of Burlap to Cashmere and Fernando Saunders of Lou Reed's Band.
Holmes auditioned for the Bruce Springsteen Band through a newspaper advertisement asking for singers with a "gospel sound".[1] She spent several years performing and touring the Eastern Seaboard with the band,[2] including a concert at the University of Virginia, and the Jersey Shore's own Brookdale College, The Student Prince, Sunshine Inn, among others.
Holmes formed a soul music trio with her daughter, Layonne Holmes, and Debbie Vaughn called Rain, while continuing to perform and record with local bands. She was also a member of Holiday Express, a charity group of local New Jersey shore musicians and volunteers.
References
^Powell, M. Delores Holmes Backstreets Publishing, 2001, p. 25.
^Kirkpatrick, R. (2009). Magic in the Night: The Words and Music of Bruce Springsteen, p. 184.
^Powell, M. In Memoriam: Delores "Dee" Holmes Backstreets Publishing, 2010, p. 20-21.
^Clarence Clemons. Big Man: Real Life & Tall Tales. Grand Central Publishing, 2009, p. 100.
Mårtensson, A. and Johansson, J. (2008). Local Heroes: The Asbury Park Music Scene Rutgers University Press. ISBN978-0-8135-4294-2.
Clarence Clemons, Don Reo, Bruce Springsteen (2009). Big Man: Real Life & Tall Tales Grand Central Publishing. ISBN978-0-446-54626-3, ISBN0-446-54626-7.