Matt Dennis (February 11, 1914 – June 21, 2002) was an
American singer, pianist, band leader, arranger, and writer of music for
popular music songs.
Born Matthew Loveland Dennis, he learned to play the
piano at a young age.. His father was a singer and his mother a violinist, and
the family business was a vaudeville act. There he made his debut as one of
"The Five Musical Lovelands." In 1933, he joined the
Horace Heidt
orchestra as piano player and vocalist. Several years later, he formed a band
with Dick Haymes, one of the great popular baritones of the time. Haymes
fronted the band, but Matt Dennis was the musical brain behind it. At the same
time, he was building a reputation as an arranger for popular singers.

He worked as arranger, accompanyist and vocal coach for
Martha Tilton, and helped out a new group that had recently formed called The
Stafford Sisters. One of the sisters was named Jo, and in 1940, she when she
had joined the Tommy Dorsey Band, she convinced TD to hire Matt as staff
arranger-composer. Dennis wrote prolifically, with 14 of his
songs recorded by
the Dorsey band in one year alone, including "Everything Happens to
Me", an early hit for Frank Sinatra.

During his service in WWII, Dennis did radio work and
arranged music for Glenn Miller's AAF Orchestra, among others. After four years
in the United States Air Force in World War II, Dennis returned to music
writing and arranging, getting a boost from his old friend Dick Haymes, who
hired him to be the music director for his radio program. He also recorded a
few sides with Paul Weston & His Orchestra for Capitol Records.
Dennis' chief collaborator was lyricist Tom Adair, and
his best-known tunes include "Will You Still Be Mine?," "Let's
Get Away from It All," "Everything Happens to Me" (1941), and
"Angel Eyes" (1953), but he also penned "We Belong
Together," "We've Reached the Point of No Return," and "You
Can Believe Me."

A popular singer and jazz pianist in the '40s, '50s and
'60s in Los
Angeles area clubs and restaurants such as the Encore, the Tally-Ho
and the Lighthouse, Dennis had his own local TV shows on KTTV and KHJ in the
early 1950s, and in 1955 was a summer replacement for Eddie Fisher on NBC-TV
with "The Matt Dennis Show."

For the next couple of decades Dennis kept working in
radio and then TV, while often hitting the nightclub circuit, but by the late
1960s he was beginning to wind down toward what would be a long retirement. He died
in a hospital in Riverside, California at the age of 88.
In 2012, Jasmine Records re-released four of Dennis'
records as "Welcome Matt". The collection included "Plays and Sings
Matt Dennis", a 1958 live performance by Dennis' piano trio, of twelve
tunes that Dennis had co-authored.
(Inf mainly edited from Wikioedia & All Music)
Matt Dennis sings his "Violets For Your Furs," written in 1941 for Tommy Dorsey and Frank Sinatra. This 1957 clip is from "The Rosemary Clooney Show."
Matt Dennis sings his "Violets For Your Furs," written in 1941 for Tommy Dorsey and Frank Sinatra. This 1957 clip is from "The Rosemary Clooney Show."