
Kui Lee
Biography
Kuiokalani Lee (July 31, 1932 – December 3, 1966) was an American singer-songwriter. Lee began his career in the mainland United States while performing as a dancer. Upon his return to Hawaii, he worked in clubs. At the Honey club, he met Don Ho, who popularized Lee's compositions. Ho's fame made Lee a local success in Hawaii. Multiple artists then covered his song "I'll Remember You". Lee was diagnosed with cancer in 1965. While he kept performing, he had two recording sessions. After his death in December 1966, Columbia Records released his debut studio album, The Extraordinary Kui Lee the same month. A part of the Hawaiian Renaissance, the Hawaiʻi Academy of Recording Arts posthumously awarded Lee a Lifetime Achievement award, and he was later inducted into the Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite
1973

Don Ho's Greatest Hits
1970

Tiny Bubbles
1966

Elvis Aron Presley (1955-1980 - 25 Anniversary)
1980

Don Ho - Again!
1966

Ilikai
1967

Ray Conniff's Hawaiian Album
1967

The Don Ho Show
1965

Hooked On Swing, The Album
1982

Hawaiian 30 Favorites
1979

Beyond The Reef
1970

Suck 'Em Up
1969

Hawaii Connie
1968

The Shadow Of Your Smile
1966

Waikiki Swings

The Sandpipers
1967
Credited work
611 releases · 119 albums · active 1965–2024
- Performance · 933
- Other credits · 12
Studios: Honolulu International Center · BMG Studios · Madison Square Garden · Commercial Sound
Frequent collaborators
- Don Ho
- Elvis
- Elvis Presley
- Various
- Roger Williams (2)
- Andy Williams
- Arthur Lyman
- Ray Conniff
