Kenny Dino

Kenneth J. Diono, known professionally as Kenny Dino (July 12, 1939 – December 10, 2009) was an American singer born in Astoria, Queens, New York, United States. Dino's family moved to Hicksville, Long Island in 1955, where he worked on a family farm. He joined the Navy in 1957, and while stationed in Iceland he came in runner-up in a talent show with his version of a song by Elvis Presley. He sang regularly on his tour of duty, and then put together an ensemble back in the States, which toured in Texas and Louisiana. He frequently played with Doug Sahm at the San Antonio Blues Club at this time. He signed with Dot Records around 1960 after moving to New York City, but quickly lost the contract, and signed to Columbia not long after. Dino was offered a chance to duet with Paul Simon but turned it down, and later was offered the song "Suspicion" (an Elvis Presley song, which later became a big hit for Terry Stafford) but was denied the opportunity by his label. He recorded a number of demos for Elvis, including the song "Good Luck Charm". His lone hit was "Your Ma Said You Cried in Your Sleep Last Night", a No. 24 U.S. Pop hit in 1961. The three back-up singers were Lois Green, Leslie Smith and Alan Eichler, who were all students at Syosset High School at the time. When all further releases yielded no commercial gain, Dino switched to acting and appeared in the film, Valley of the Dolls. Robert Plant later covered this tune on his 1990 release, Manic Nirvana.

Let's Go Steady, Vol. 37 - 2022-03-01T00:00:00.000000Z

It's a Hit! Blasts From '60s Past! - 2018-09-28T00:00:00.000000Z

The Shag: Jukebox Saturday Night - 2016-12-30T00:00:00.000000Z

Working On My Dream - 2007-10-03T00:00:00.000000Z

Your Ma Said You Cried In Your Sleep Last Night / What Good Are Dreams - 1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

Similar Artists

Bobby Pedrick Jr.

Bobby Comstock & The Counts

Gary Stites

Billy & Lillie

Freddie Cannon

Frankie Sardo

The Whirlwinds

Doug Sheldon

Dicky Doo & The Don'ts

Barry Darvell

Bobby Comstock

The Counts

The Barries

Dante & The Evergreens

Frank Slay and His Orchestra

The Impacs

The Percells

Rochelle Johnson

Dean & Jean

the DeVilles