He was born and grew up in
Madeley in
Staffordshire, UK. Although he is most closely associated with the 1970s
Northern soul scene, he has been described by the author and musician
Mark 'Snowboy' Cotgrove as: ...one of the most important black music tastemakers there has ever been in the UK As a teenager in the 1960s, Curtis developed a passion for music through listening to
offshore radio stations such as Radio Caroline and through a friend's sister who would listen to
Tamla Motown records at their house. In 1973, after the closure of the Golden Torch, Curtis began a weekly residency at the
Blackpool Mecca’s Highland Room soul nights and was joined by fellow DJ and collector
Ian Levine in a partnership which lasted until 1978. Hitherto, the Northern soul scene had been a revivalist movement built around obscure US recordings from the 1960s which conformed to a certain rhythmic and vocal template. However, the Curtis/Levine duo are noted for successfully introducing contemporary styles of
African-American music such as
disco,
funk and
jazz funk onto their Highland Room playlists and, as a result, the creation of a split in the Northern soul movement which led to the parallel modern soul subgenre. Levine and Curtis are also credited with being amongst the first DJs to introduce
mixing to British nightclubs. This technique, which had been pioneered by DJ
Francis Grasso in the clubs of
New York City, enabled the DJ to create a non-stop sequence of records. In September 1978, after quitting his weekly spot at the Blackpool Mecca, Curtis began a residency at
Rafters nightclub in
Manchester where his playlists continued to include soul and disco but leaned more heavily towards jazz funk and
fusion. He also continued to DJ at all-day soul festival events at venues such as the
Manchester Ritz and the Blackpool Mecca, regularly playing before crowds of between 1500 and 3000 people. Around the years 1982 to 1983, whilst continuing to DJ at events around the country, he began to move towards more exclusively jazz sets at clubs such as Berlin in Manchester and is credited as pioneering the
UK jazz dance scene in the North of England. In the early 1990s he concentrated on his computer games business ==References==