Peter Tork

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Higher And Higher 00:00 Tools
Pirates 00:00 Tools
Tender Is 00:00 Tools
I Remember Christmas 00:00 Tools
Milkshake 00:00 Tools
Mgb-Gt 00:00 Tools
Stranger Things Have Happened 00:00 Tools
Giant Step 00:00 Tools
Get What You Pay For 00:00 Tools
Miracle 00:00 Tools
Gettin' In 00:00 Tools
Sea Change 00:00 Tools
I truly understand 00:00 Tools
Come Home in My Kitchen 00:00 Tools
Cripple Creek 00:00 Tools
It Was A Night Like This 00:00 Tools
Cuckoo 00:00 Tools
Swing Banjo 00:00 Tools
Pleasant Valley Sunday 00:00 Tools
You Get What You Pay For 01:45 Tools
Folk Music Lecture By Peter 00:00 Tools
Higher And Higher (demo) 00:00 Tools
(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone (New Monks) (A-) 00:00 Tools
Anytime, Anyplace, Anywhere 00:00 Tools
Ain't Your Fault 00:00 Tools
Lady's Baby 00:00 Tools
Since You Went Away (live on The Uncle Floyd Show - 1982) 00:00 Tools
Sea Change (live on The Stephanie Miller Show - 1995) 00:00 Tools
Hi Hi Babe (Live on Uncle Floyd) (B-) 00:00 Tools
Last Train To Clarksville 00:00 Tools
I Prithee (Do Not Ask For Love) 03:00 Tools
Annie Had A Baby 00:00 Tools
One More Heartache 00:00 Tools
I Know Love 00:00 Tools
Wasn't In The Cards 00:00 Tools
For Pete's Sake 00:00 Tools
Early Morning Blues and Greens 00:00 Tools
Your Molecular Structure 00:00 Tools
She Belongs To Me 00:00 Tools
Good Looker 00:00 Tools
Bound To Lose 00:00 Tools
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Peter Halsten Thorkelson (born February 13, 1942), better known as Peter Tork, is an American musician, songwriter and actor. He was born in Washington, D.C. and began studying piano at the age of nine, and showed an aptitude for music by learning to play several different instruments, including the banjo and acoustic and bass guitars. Tork attended E.O.Smith High School in Storrs, Connecticut. He then attended Carleton College but dropped out and moved to New York City, where he became part of the folk music scene in Greenwich Village during the first half of the 1960s. While there he befriended other up and coming musicians such as Stephen Stills, and after both moved to the Los Angeles area Stills suggested Tork audition for a new television series about four pop-rock musicians. Tork got the job and became one of the four members of The Monkees, who ended up being both characters in a television sitcom and a band in their own right. Tork was a proficient musician, and though the group did not play their own instruments on their first two albums, after that point he played keyboards, bass guitar, banjo, and other instruments on their recordings. He also wrote the closing theme song of the second season of The Monkees, "For Pete's Sake." On the television show, he was relegated to playing the dummy even though he was actually an intelligent, literate person. After two years of the show, six albums, a movie, and a television special, Tork had had enough and quit the group, striking out on his own with a group called “Release.” This new band never achieved success, and problems with drugs including alcohol led to his leaving show business entirely for a few years while he taught school and coached basketball. Finally in 1980 he quit drinking and the next year gave up drugs, and in 1986 he rejoined fellow-Monkees Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz for a 20th anniversary reunion tour. Since then he has intermittently toured with his former bandmates and also played with his own bands The Peter Tork Project and Shoe Suede Blues as well as in solo performances and with touring partner James Lee Stanley. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.