Peter Curtis

 Jazz Recordings


Pete’s Pandemic Playlist

My newest record is out on March 1st and is available for streaming and purchase in all the usual places. This is an album of songs that have gone through my head at various times throughout this pandemic. It was recorded at home, primarily during lockdown on solo guitar. While most of these songs have an obvious connection to covid, a few of them might benefit from some explanation.

The phrase “a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down” was taken from songwriter Robert Sherman’s son, Jeffrey, who used it to describe his experience taking the polio vaccine. “The Nearness of You” is the one song on the record on which I’m joined by another musician, my colleague from Riverside City College, saxophonist, Charlie Richard. We played our parts remotely from our own home studios. A line from“Somewhere” hopefully envisions getting to a place with “open air”. Here’s to all of us getting to that place soon.


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Steele in Love

This album is a collaboration with 91 year old vocalist Ken Steele. On most of the tracks Peter and Ken are accompanied by virtuoso bassist Baba Elefante.

Ken is a classic crooner. He started singing professionally in Winnipeg in the 1940s. Soon he was performing with a 50 piece orchestra on a weekly, coast to coast, Canadian radio show. He moved to Toronto and performed regularly on numerous Canadian Broadcasting Company radio and television programs and in nightclubs around the city.  

As musical tastes changed to rock and roll, Ken began writing for TV and radio and eventually moved to L.A. He worked on a number of sitcoms and even won an Emmy for his writing for Shari Lewis and Lamb Chop.                                         

In 2002, Ken moved to Palm Springs and began singing professionally again.  We have played a number of gigs together and decided to make this record. It’s available for download at the sites below, and is streaming on all the usual sites.


Christmas with your Jewish Boyfriend

My holiday album, Christmas with Your Jewish Boyfriend: Christmas Music by Jewish Songwriters came out in November 2019. The album’s title track is an original song. 

In addition, I have a multi-media program/lecture-recital that I have presented at UC Riverside’s Jewish Studies lecture series two years in a row and at synagogues in Los Angeles and Riverside.  It’s an informative and entertaining history of the Jewish songwriters who wrote Christmas songs interspersed with my jazz guitar interpretations of those songs.


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Swing State

Original, instrumental jazz that shows the influence of Curtis's classical guitar background as well as the echoes of Astor Piazzolla, Joe Pass, Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Wonder and Thelonious Monk.

 Classical


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Musical Recordings


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Love U.

This is a musical for which I wrote the songs - both lyrics and music.  My partner in the process, Montreal writer, Joel Yanofsky wrote the book.  The show is a romantic comedy set in and satirizing the academic world - a world with a lot of potential for satire. 

The first production was put on by the University of Redlands Theater Department with support from the Coil School for the Arts.  Chris Beach directed it and Jo Dierdorff did the choreography.

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Misspent Youth

 
MISSPENT YOUTH

Like any reasonable guitar playing kid, I wanted to be a rock star. Stubborn Blood was a band in which I sang and played guitar, as did Dan Danger (nee Cambell). Darell Stables was on drums and Clint Murray played bass and generally looked impossibly cool. Before Darell and Clint we had Troy Nixdorf on bass and Paul Wilcox on drums. Paul went on to become a canadian rock star in the 90s wit hthe band Moist and Troy went to university.

Though we never hit the big time, playing in Vancouver and Victoria’s alt. rock clubs was a really cool way to spend my teenage years. We got to open for the Replacements and The Hoodoo Gurus: two heroes of my misspent youth. I’ve included a few of our demos for your listening pleasure or for the historical record or for your historical pleasure or the listening record or something…

In the photo here, I think that I was trying to look like a bad ass, but trust me, I wasn’t one. I kind of want to smack my 16 year old self upside the head when I look at this shot. I’m trying to look tough, but probably had to get home in time for the dinner my mom had made.

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