Peter Tork
Biography
Peter Halsten Thorkelson (February 13, 1942 – February 21, 2019), better known by his stage name Peter Tork, was an American musician and actor. He was best known as the bass guitarist and keyboardist of the Monkees and co-star of the NBC television series of the same name (1966–68). Tork grew up in Connecticut, and in the mid-1960s as part of the Greenwich Village folk scene in New York City, he befriended musician Stephen Stills. After moving to Los Angeles with Stills, he auditioned for a new musical television sitcom, The Monkees. The series ran from 1966 to 1968 and made Tork and his co-stars teen idols. In addition to albums released with the band, Tork released on Beachwood Recordings one solo album, Stranger Things Have Happened (1994), and later toured with James Lee Stanley, with whom he also recorded three duet albums (Two Man Band, Once Again and Live/Backstage at the Coffee Gallery), as well as his band, Shoe Suede Blues.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

The Monkees
1966

More Of The Monkees
1967

Headquarters
1967

Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd.
1967

Wonderwall Music
1968

Good Times!
2016

Then & Now... The Best Of The Monkees
1986

Head
1968

Daydream Believer
1967

The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees
1968

Live (The Mike & Micky Show)
2020

Pool It!
1987

Greatest Hits
1995

Live 1967
1987

Summer Of Love
1986

The Monkees Present
1969

Instant Replay
1969

Good Times! Plus!
2016

Where The Action Is! (Los Angeles Nuggets: 1965-1968)
2009

Missing Links, Volume Three
1996

The Monterey International Pop Festival
1992

Missing Links
1987

Hit Factory
1985

More Greatest Hits
1982
Credited work
632 releases · 65 albums · active 1966–2025
- Performance · 2,616
- Other credits · 231
- Production · 22
- Engineering · 1
Studios: RCA Victor's Music Center Of The World · RCA Victor Studios, Nashville · RCA Studios, Hollywood · RCA Recording Studios
Frequent collaborators
- The Monkees
- Various
- Micky Dolenz
- Soul Asylum (2)
- Albert Brooks
- The Grip Weeds
- George Harrison
- The Holy Sisters Of The Gaga Dada
