A new book about South Dakota’s best known
rock and roll band and its leader, who is considered the
father of rock and roll music in the state, has been released.
Chuck Cecil of Brookings, a retired South Dakota newsman
who is now writing books, has teamed with Myron Wachendorf of
Sioux Falls to write Myron Lee and the Caddies: Rockin’ ‘n
Rollin’ Out of the Midwest.
Wachendorf changed his name to Myron Lee while still in
high school, after he formed the band in 1958 with several
classmates. He picked “Lee” because he was a fan of popular
singer Brenda Lee and “so people wouldn’t get us confused with
a polka band,” he said.
“The Caddies for a band name sounded clean-cut,” Lee said,
and was also picked because members of the band had summer
jobs as caddies at Sioux Falls golf courses.
Lee’s band was the first successful rock and roll group in
South Dakota after the new sound gained in popularity
following release of the movie Blackboard Jungle that had a
theme song by Bill Haley and the Comets called “Rock Around
the Clock.”
Myron Lee and the Caddies entertained for the next 34 years
in venues throughout North America and especially at dance
halls across the upper Midwest.
The band got its first break in 1958 when it was hired to
play at the Stardust Club in east Sioux Falls. Soon they were
also playing at the Sioux Falls Cabana Club.
Wachendorf and the others had to have notes from their
mothers so that they could perform in establishment where
liquor was sold, and to remain out after curfew.
They were soon invited to accompany a big accordion band to
a dance at the Groveland Park Pavilion near Tyndall, to play
when the big band members took their breaks.
The Groveland dance hall crowd was so taken by Myron Lee
and the Caddies that dancers booed when the big band members
returned to the stage. The dancehall manager George Beringer
recognized the emerging popularity of the new sound and hired
Myron Lee for a return engagement.
As the band gained notoriety, it attracted the attention of
national signing stars and big names in the music business.
Buddy Knox, who wrote and recorded the number one hit “Party
Doll,” hired the band to accompany him on the first ever rock
and roll coast to coast tour of Canada by American artists.
After the Canadian tour, Fargo, N. D. singing star Bobby
Vee picked Myron Lee and the Caddies to be his band on tours
throughout the nation. The Sioux Falls group also caught the
eye and ear of Dick Clark of ABC Bandstand fame.
Clark hired the band to back up popular musicians on his
famous Caravan of Stars that toured the nation by bus. After
the initial tour in 1963, Clark hired The Caddies for a return
engagement in 1965.
Myron Lee also recorded thirteen records, including one he
wrote called “Rona Baby,” that climbed to number ten on the
top forty charts.
After the invasion of The Beatles music from England, the
popularity of rock and roll waned, but later made a comeback
and Myron Lee and the Caddies were again touring dance halls,
pavilions and nightclubs throughout the upper Midwest.
In the book, Lee recalls some of the experiences at dance
halls and pavilions in South Dakota and the Midwest, from the
Hollyhock in Hatfield, MN, to Ruskin Park near Forestburg, and
dozens of other ballrooms that were Saturday night dancing
destinations.
In the book he talks about the changing music preferences
and dancing styles, and about the rise and fall of the street
dance.
The book includes over sixty photographs of Myron Lee and
the Caddies performing with the big stars of the day, from the
Everly Brothers to the late Conway Twitty.
Cecil said he was amazed at the name recognition throughout
South Dakota of the band.
“Just about everyone I talked to who was over thirty years
old not only knew of Myron Lee and the Caddies, but had a
story to tell about attending a Myron Lee dance when they were
younger.”
Cecil said that Myron Lee and the Caddies is probably the
best-known South Dakota musical group ever.
What is unique, Cecil said, is that because of the band’s
longevity, several generations danced to the music of Myron
Lee and the Caddies.”
Copies of the book are available at Lewis Drug Stores in
Sioux Falls, Cover to Cover bookstores or from Enterprise Book
Company, 1036 Parkway Blvd., Brookings, for $16 plus $2
mailing.