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| | Barton County (Kansas) Arts Council
HEARTFELT: THE MUSIC OF CURTIS & LORETTA
Released on 11/05/2007
For an evening of heartfelt
original songs, plus traditional music of the British Isles, America and beyond,
join us Sunday evening, November 11, at 7:30 p.m., for a concert by Curtis and
Loretta. Seats are $10 with advance reservations, since seating is limited.
Tickets may be purchased weekday afternoons at the Arts Center, Forest and Main,
Great Bend, or by calling (620) 792-4221 or (620) 792-3097. Reservations may
also be made by e-mail through [email protected].
Curtis & Loretta's music
comes straight from the heart. The husband and wife duo's extraordinary
harmonies and proficiency on a parade of stringed instruments create an alluring
frame for their poignant original songs, and carefully chosen traditional pieces
from the British Isles, America, and beyond. The current menagerie includes
Celtic harp, mandocello, mandolin, guitars, clawhammer banjo, and National steel
ukulele, plus a bit of kazoo, harmonica, and shakers.
The duo celebrates
two landmark anniversaries this year. They were married (to each other!) 20
years ago, in Santiago, Mexico. But ten years earlier, in the spring of 1977,
they chanced to meet each other on the beach just outside Santa Cruz,
California. Their best guesstimate of the actual day is sometime in April. Love
was born, a duo was formed, and they took to the road, hitchhiking up and down
the West Coast, playing in cafes, and on the street.
Over the next three
decades, Curtis Teague and Loretta Simonet's harmonies have gotten tighter than
ever, their stage presence has blossomed, and they've graduated from the street
to dedicated fans at folk clubs across the U.S. They rack up 40,000 miles a
year, crisscrossing the country to deliver their own unique brand of folk
singer/songwriter music. They've shared billings with Jez Lowe, Vassar Clements,
Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, Anne Hills, Greg Brown, Holly Near, and Bill Staines,
to name just a few.
Their heartfelt original
songs have won them fans throughout the U.S. and overseas. Curtis & Loretta
revel in writing songs about the heroism and integrity of real-life, ordinary
people, often people they actually know. "Angel of Bergen-Belsen" is the story
of Luba Tryszynska, a holocaust survivor who saved 54 children during World War
II. Curtis & Loretta sought her out and met her after writing the song, and
have visited her four times at her home in Miami. "Gone Forever" tells the heart
wrenching story of Loretta coming to terms with her dad's Alzheimer's. "Elza and
Branko (The Siege of Sarajevo)" details the love and bravery of a couple living
through the Balkan wars. Curtis & Loretta located Elza (now a widow) a
couple years ago, and stay in contact with her.
Rick Mason wrote in the
Minneapolis City Pages A-List, "There's something about the charming local folk
duo Curtis & Loretta that transcends their talents on a variety of stringed
instruments, their finely interwoven vocal harmonies, and their ability to make
traditional folk tunes -- mostly from the British Isles--shimmer with fresh
vitality. That secret ingredient is at the core of Loretta's songwriting (Curtis
ain't no slouch on that score either.) With a journalist's eye for detail and a
knack for tugging at heartstrings while cutting to the quick of an issue, she
writes riveting songs..." And though it's not commonly known, folksingers do
want to have fun! The duo's perennial humor shines through, with songs of harp
players trying to get into heaven, small spenders on first dates, bugs, and
lutefisk! In 2002, Minneapolis entertainment paper City Pages named them "Best
Acoustic Performer of the Twin Cities." They've received numerous Minnesota
Music Award nominations for Best Acoustic Folk Artist.
This past year saw them
touring in support of their latest CD, "Just My Heart For You," which is on the
"Top Albums of 2006" on FOLKDJ-LIST They also made that website's "Top Artists
of 2006." In the spring, they spent two months on the West Coast, playing folk
clubs from Seattle, to Portland, to Sacramento. In the fall they made their
fourth pilgrimage to spend time with Luba in Miami, singing her song at concerts
all along the way. In December, a Christmas card and letter arrived from
Croatia, written in Elza's hand. Curtis & Loretta live and breathe folk
music. It's not something they put away at the end of the day, not something
they ever want to "retire from." It's woven inextricably into their lives.
Curtis Teague
Curtis grew up in
Duncanville, near Dallas, Texas. He learned to sing harmony alongside his mother
in the small family church (his dad and grandfather took turns preaching each
Sunday). When the family acquired a record player from an uncle, it came with
three albums; Perry Como, Bing Crosby, and Pete Seeger. Curtis chose Pete, and
his musical influences have tended that way ever since. He bought a guitar from
the want ads when he was 12, and his parents lamented he'd never be able to
learn to play it. Of course, that only made him more determined.
He ran
away from home at 15, and lived in Hawaii for five years. He spent most of his
time there as a beach minstrel/bum/tree house dweller. He studied shakuhachi
(Japanese meditation flute), and learned to body surf and sail. He ended up
crewing on an antique 60 foot ketch from Honolulu to San Francisco, a 30 day
crossing. Back on the mainland, he continued studying shakuhachi with his
teacher Peter Ross, who had moved to Santa Cruz, California. Curtis also
apprenticed as a shakuhachi builder with Peter. And he joined the incredible
street music scene on the mall in Santa Cruz in the late seventies, along with
such soon-to-be luminaries as Bob Brozman, Artis the Spoonman, and The Flying
Karamazov Brothers. Curtis has developed his own unique, self-taught style
on several stringed instruments. After guitar, he taught himself how to play
banjo, then mandolin, which logically led to mandocello and mandola. His latest
love is ukulele. "Teague is the master of a host of instruments, including
guitar, mandocello, ukulele, clawhammer banjo," says the Express-Times of
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. And his full rich voice is an integral part of the
duo's harmonies, whether they're singing originals or traditional songs.
Loretta Simonet
Back while Curtis was
sweltering in the Texas heat, Loretta Simonet was growing up north of there, in
the historic river town of Stillwater, which is the birthplace of Minnesota. She
grew up loving the stage (any stage!), singing and putting on puppet shows in
the basement, and taking piano lessons. At 12, she taught herself to play guitar
from a Peter Paul and Mary songbook, so she could play in the teen choir at
church. P.P.M. were one of her first loves in folk music, along with Joni
Mitchell, Judy Collins, and Michael Johnson.
Back while Curtis was
sweltering in the Texas heat, Loretta Simonet was growing up north of there, in
the historic river town of Stillwater, which is the birthplace of Minnesota. She
grew up loving the stage (any stage!), singing and putting on puppet shows in
the basement, and taking piano lessons. At 12, she taught herself to play guitar
from a Peter Paul and Mary songbook, so she could play in the teen choir at
church. P.P.M. were one of her first loves in folk music, along with Joni
Mitchell, Judy Collins, and Michael Johnson.
She acted in high school
plays, and sang in concert choir, then went to St. Cloud State University in
Minnesota. She spent all her time in the performing arts building, singing in
concert choir, acting in plays, building sets and sewing costumes. She did
summer stock for two years, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in
Theatre.
Curtis says Loretta is a
natural born singer. She's developed her voice into a pure, rich instrument.
Though she has been compared to the likes of legends Joan Baez and Kate Wolf,
the truth is that her distinctive voice sounds like no one else's. City Pages
(Minneapolis / St. Paul) called Loretta's voice "compelling and crystalline,"
and the Jon Bream of the Minneapolis Star Tribune says, Loretta Simonet has a
jewel of a voice."
Self-taught on guitar
and mandolin, her hands found their true home on folk harp in 1988. She soon
discovered that harp was the instrument she was "meant to play," and decided she
would seek out a teacher for this very special endeavor. She has studied harp
with Gaylord Stauffer, and Bridgett Stuckey (harpist for the St. Paul Chamber
Orchestra) and she currently studies voice with Jeanie Brindley-Barnett.
Curtis Picks Loretta
Up On Beach
After graduating,
Loretta headed to the West Coast to pursue her dream of performing, either in
folk music or theatre. She did some acting in community theatre and sang in a
variety show. To bolster that meager income, she was working as a nurse's aide
in Santa Cruz in 1977 when she went to the beach one day, guitar in hand, to
practice for that night's variety show.
A young man walked up to
her with the age-old line, "Hey, I play guitar!" It was Curtis, just back from
Hawaii. Loretta had heard that line before, often from guys who didn't know a
fret from a flatpick. But this guy was different. He ran home and returned a few
minutes later with a mandolin. The two sat down on a log and started jamming and
even with that first song, the harmonies surprised them both. Their voices fit
together so effortlessly. Loretta invited Curtis to sit in at her gig that
night. Soon she quit her nursing home job and joined him at his "gig," playing
music on the street. A few months later, they were hitchhiking up and down the
West Coast, playing at coffeehouses and cafes. They picked apples and pears to
help make ends meet in Washington. They backpacked through Europe for six
months, busking on the streets and in subways, and picking tulips in Holland
when they ran out of money. Eventually they ended up back in Minneapolis.
The first songs they
performed together were sixties folk songs (they think that first one on the
beach was Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne"). In the eighties they found themselves
drawn to Celtic music, especially when Loretta started playing harp. An exciting
step in the evolution of their music was starting to write their own songs. The
duo's originals are absolutely influenced by their traditional background, but
they're not afraid to tackle tough, contemporary issues. Rick Mason of
Minneapolis City Pages said, "With a journalist's eye for detail and a knack for
tugging at heartstrings while cutting to the quick of an issue, she writes
riveting songs."
Between the duo's gigs
at local and regional folk clubs and festivals, writing songs, and learning new
instruments, the couple found creative ways to supplement their music income.
Curtis earned a degree in Musical Stringed Instrument Repair at Red Wing
Technical College in Minnesota. It's one of a few such accredited classes in the
country. He has built a national reputation for identifying and dating rare
vintage pieces. Loretta built a cottage industry making and selling glass beaded
jewelry at Renaissance Faires across the country while Curtis repaired
instruments at local music stores. In 1987, they were married in Santiago,
Mexico (near Manzanillo).
They Hit the Road
Again (and Again)
In the nineties, their
love for the music and performing drew them back to the road. They hit the road
in full force (this time in a mini-van, not hitchhiking!), giving up the beads
and instrument repairs to tour extensively in the Midwest, and since the
mid-nineties, from coast to coast across the U.S. The duo that started out
playing for tips on the street in Santa Cruz now plays full-time, spending
several months of the year on the road, thankful to be making their living doing
what they truly love.
They've played at folk
festivals, folk clubs, concerts, universities, on national and regional public
radio, and on national cable television. They've shared billings with Arlo
Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Jez Lowe, Greg Brown, Anne Hills, Bill Staines, Holly
Near, Tanya Savory, and Vassar Clements, to name just a few. In 2000, they were
honored to be included on an NPR holiday special hosted by Judy Collins, "Do You
Hear What I Hear: A Holiday Folk Tour."
An evening with Curtis
& Loretta is a captivating experience. It runs the gamut of rolling with
laughter, to holding back tears, with plenty of side trips in between. Their
thought-provoking originals and timeless traditional songs are seamlessly woven
together by their tight harmonies and their array of stringed instruments. And
their years of performing and touring together have honed their comfortable
stage presence to a delightful edge.
This program is presented in
part by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment
for the Arts, a federal agency. The City of Great Bend, Barton County and CPI
Qualified Plan Consultants provide additional support of the Barton County Arts
Council.
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