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Films about Queer History

 

Catie Curtis

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Catie Curtis

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Truth From LiesTruth From Lies Catie Curtis

On her 1995 debut, Curtis hints at the wise songwriting of her more mature work, even if she doesn't always seem sure of the way there. She stumbles a bit with forced images (the lover in "Crocodile Tears" threatens to gobble her up), awkward humor (in "Slave to My Belly" she converses with her tummy), and a few strained defenses of her sexuality. At the same time, Curtis offers what remains her finest song, "Troubled Mind," with its braided, fingerstyle guitar figures and simple, pure refrain: "I'm tired from all the weight / I'm tired of being strong / So won't you come and stay / And let me lay down in your arms." Curtis is often compared to Shawn Colvin, but Colvin hasn't written or sung this soulfully since her own debut. Guest spots from fellow New Englanders John Gorka (harmony) and Patty Larkin (guitar) complement Curtis's lucid, clean folk rock. --Roy Kasten

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Crash Course In RosesCrash Course In Roses Catie Curtis

A Crash Course in Roses finds Boston-based singer-songwriter Catie Curtis streamlining the sound that made her 1997 self-titled release a critical breakthrough. Eschewing lush string and horn arrangements, she allows her songwriting and singing to take center stage on this 13-song set of midtempo, acoustic-flavored folk-pop. An excellent group of musicians (including Morphine drummer Billy Conway) create an intimate backdrop for Curtis's warm, enticing voice. The spare, no-frills arrangements complement the simple honesty of love songs such as "Gave Me Love" and "Magnolia Street." While Curtis clearly works the same musical and emotional terrain as Shawn Colvin and Mary Chapin Carpenter (who sings backup vocals here), she lacks their lyrical and musical bite. These are pretty songs and, taken together, they make for a pretty--though not exceptional--collection. --Percy Keegan

Catie Curtis won the Best Album Award from the Gay and Lesbian American Music Awards for Crash Course in Roses.

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Catie Curtis

This site hosts a biography, discography with lyrics and chords to many of Catie's songs, tour dates, contact information, a scrapbook, articles and reviews.

Excerpt:

Catie Curtis, one of the most promising talents to emerge from today's singer/songwriter scene, returns on October 7 with her second album for Guardian Records. Produced by Roy Bittan, pianist for Bruce Springsteen's E-Street Band, the self-titled Catie Curtis showcases the artist's pure, affecting vocals and piercingly honest songwriting.

The introspective nature of curtis' songs are intensified on this new project by a top-notch team of musical players. Roy Bittan handles keyboards, Kenny Aronoff (John Mellencamp) guests on drums, Tony Levin (Peter Gabriel) provides the bass, and Catie's longtime touring partner, Jimmy Ryan, rounds out the team on electric and acoustic mandolin. Curtis, herself, provides guitar.

Curtis likes to be called a "story collector." For Catie Curtis, she has written songs based on everything from bits of conversation overheard while on the road, to headlines of forgotten news stories, to the lives of the people who populate small New England towns such as the one in which she was raised...

  

Rykodisc features Catie Curtis

Excerpt:

An engaging live performer, dubbed "a folk rock goddess" by the New Yorker, Catie Curtis brings a rawer, rootsy sound to her Rykodisc debut, A CRASH COURSE IN ROSES. Her third album is equal parts urban folk, acoustic rock, and pop, all of it lyrical, immediate, and illuminating music, with songs that communicate emotional depths with honesty and clarity. Her direct and powerful lyrics often deal with life’s dramatic complexities and difficult sidesteps, making each listening experience an intimate encounter. True to form, Catie’s new album is rich with experience and long on feeling...

 

Catie Curtis at Skyhand.com

By Kim Tyburski

Excerpt:

An engaging live performer, based in the Boston, Massachusetts area, Catie brings a rawer, rootsy sound to her Rykodisc debut A Crash Course In Roses. With the musicians given freedom to improvise, they created sinuous grooves that energized her songs, and with the lushness of pop and the lyrical vibrancy of folk that have been mainstays of her musical sound, result on Roses is rich with experience and long on the feeling. While her last albums were pieces of introspection-sending people inward to work through their emotions, Catie wanted this album to rock with the kind of subtle force that would invigorate people as they deal with life's problems. Her songs tackle potent themes (death and love among them), exploring the nature of life when impacted with sudden, dramatic events. An album, made not so much of lightness, but of the things that give strength to move away from darkness.

   

Interviewing Catie Curtis

This site, from from Aqua Girl 2000, hosts excerpts from an interview with Catie Curtis by Gregg Shapiro, July 28, 1999

Excerpt:

GS: As an out artist, you haven't shied away from gay themes in your songs, and that remains true with some of the songs on "A Crash Course In Roses," as well.

CC: The obvious one is "What's The Matter." I grew up in a small town in Maine, and by the time I hit 12 years old, I started to feel like there wasn't a real respect for difference. It's not like growing up in a Native American community where they have two-spirit people. It's sacred and they appreciate it. Uniqueness is a little bit suspect (where I come from) and "What's The Matter," is addressing that. Whether it's about being gay - it mentions in the bridge, "What if I am Black or Jew/straight or queer/mother of two," that whole thing. That is, for me, an obviously gay-themed song. Then there's the first track, "Gave Me Love," even though it's very subtle, to me it has a gay subtext because it's about a dream that I had when I was first coming out. I used to have this dream in high school about being chased and being afraid and I'm sure it was about being afraid of coming out. I finally had this amazing dream one night about running along the beach in Maine where I grew up and how the police were chasing me, (like the line in the song) "The blue men out on the beach." I was being chased and then I ran into the arms of the woman that I was falling in love with and I got this total hit of "It doesn't matter. You don't have to run. Love is so powerful. There's nothing to fear." It was this amazing, unconditional love feeling that I had in this dream.  It was totally life altering in terms of being comfortable with coming out. "Gave Me Love," to me, is partly about the gay subtext of "Don't give up on me, I'm not going to be afraid to love."

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