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Thread started 05/20/13 5:17pm

MickyDolenz

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A Midsummer's Night With The Monkees 2013

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #1 posted 05/20/13 6:03pm

MickyDolenz

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NEW FROM RHINO HANDMADE: THE MONKEES PRESENT MICKY, DAVID, MICHAEL

NEW FROM RHINO HANDMADE: THE MONKEES PRESENT MICKY, DAVID, MICHAEL (Deluxe)


By October 1969, things were radically different for The Monkees. Their NBC show had left prime time, Peter Tork had left the group, and Top 40 hits were no longer a sure thing. It was in this atmosphere that Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones and Michael Nesmith exerted more creative control to record THE MONKEES PRESENT. The resulting album is one of the group's most varied, from the iconic single, "Listen To The Band," to Micky's anti-war anthem, "Mommy And Daddy," Davy's lush "French Song," and Michael's Nashville-tinged barn-burner, "Good Clean Fun."

Strictly limited to 5,000 individually numbered boxes, the newly re-mastered and expanded THE MONKEES PRESENT is the latest release in Rhino Handmade's lavish Monkees boxed sets. Packed with a whopping 85 tracks (60 previously unreleased!) over 3 CD's, Monkees historian and reissue producer Andrew Sandoval has raided the vault, pulling previously unheard songs, alternate versions and backing tracks from the original master tapes. THE MONKEES PRESENT also includes an exclusive bonus 7" vinyl single for "Good Clean Fun (Alternate Mix)" b/w "Mommy and Daddy (Mono Mix)" in a picture sleeve.

THE MONKEES PRESENT ships in late July, but is available now for pre-order exclusively at Monkees.com. This box is not available from any store or other online retailer and is sure to sell out, so reserve your copy now.

Please note: The release date 7/30/13 is not yet finalized and subject to change. You will be notified if there is a delay in the arrival date for your product. Cover art is not final and may change.

Track List:

DISC ONE:
1 Little Girl
2 Good Clean Fun
3 If I Knew
4 Bye Bye Baby Bye Bye
5 Never Tell A Woman Yes
6 Looking For The Good Times
7 Ladies Aid Society
8 Listen To The Band (fake stereo mix)
9 French Song
10 Mommy And Daddy
11 Oklahoma Backroom Dancer
12 Pillow Time
13 Time And Time Again (November 1969 stereo mix)
14 Down The Highway (November 1969 stereo mix)
15 Steam Engine (November 1969 stereo mix)
16 If You Have The Time (November 1969 stereo mix)
17 Angel Band (November 1969 stereo mix)
18 Rose Marie (November 1969 stereo mix)
19 I Never Thought It Peculiar (No strings & backing vocals - August 1969)
20 Of You (November 1969 stereo mix)
21 Kicking Stones (1969 mix)
22 If I Knew (Bill & Davy's stereo mix)
23 The Crippled Lion (November 1969 stereo mix)
24 My Storybook Of You (Tommy & Bobby's stereo mix)
25 Carlisle Wheeling (November 1969 stereo mix)
26 French Song (LP master with alternate ending - stereo)
27 Hollywood (stereo)
28 My Storybook Of You ("New" 1969 stereo mix)
29 Circle Sky ("New" 1969 stereo mix)
30 Kool Aid spot

DISC TWO:
1 The Monkees Present radio spot
2 If I Knew (TV Mix mono)
3 Bye Bye Baby Bye Bye (mono)
4 Looking For The Good Times (mono)
5 Ladies Aid Society (1969 mono mix)
6 Listen To The Band (single mix)
7 French Song (TV mix mono)
8 Mommy & Daddy (1969 mono mix)
9 Circle Sky (1969 "New" mono mix)
10 Penny Music (TV mix mono)
11 Apples, Peaches, Bananas And Pears (1969 mono mix)
12 Of You (1969 mono mix)
13 I Never Thought It Peculiar (1969 mono mix without overdubs)
14 Kicking Stones (1969 mono mix)
15 Listen To The Band (LP version true mono mix)
16 If You Have The Time (1969 mono mix without Moog)
17 Midnight Train (TV mix mono)
18 My Storybook Of You (mono)
19 Steam Engine (mono)
20 Time And Time Again (November 1969 mono mix)
21 Mommy & Daddy (7/1/69) stereo mix 3
22 I Never Thought It Peculiar (September 1969 mono mix with overdubs)
23 Bye Bye Baby Bye (July 1969 stereo mix)
24 If You Have The Time (1969 mono mix with Moog)
25 Mommy & Daddy (7/2/69) stereo mix
26 Time And Time Again (November 1969 alternate mono mix)
27 Monkees Greatest Hits radio spot

DISC THREE:
1 Little Girl (take 7)
2 Calico Girlfriend
3 If I Knew (take 11)
4 You're So Good (alternate mix)
5 Little Red Rider (alternate mix)
6 If You Have The Time (take 4)
7 Music Bridge "We'll Be Back In A Minute" (take 12)
8 Listen To The Band (alternate stereo mix)
9 French Song (take 3)
10 Mommy And Daddy (May 13, 1969 stereo mix 9)
11 Thank You My Friend (backing track - take 4)
12 Pillow Time (Takes 8 & 9)
13 How Can I Tell You
14 Steam Engine (1969 rough stereo mix)
15 Time And Time Again (take 1)
16 Good Afternoon (take 14)
17 Opening Night
18 Lynn Harper (backing track - take 8)
19 Music Bridge "We'll Be Back In A Minute" (take 18)
20 The Good Earth (alternate take)
21 London Bridge (backing track - take 4)
22 Music Bridge "We'll Be Back In A Minute" (version three)
23 A Bus That Never Comes (backing track - take 9)
24 Omega (backing track - take 8)
25 13 Is Not Our Lucky Number (backing track)
26 Michigan Blackhawk (backing track - take 4)
27 Little Tommy Blues (backing track - take 5)
28 Till Then (backing track - take 2)


VINYL 45:
A Good Clean Fun (alternate mix with extra percussion)
B Mommy & Daddy (7/10/69) mono mix

[Edited 5/20/13 18:13pm]

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #2 posted 05/21/13 10:30am

MickyDolenz

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Monkees Announce Tour: Band Sets 24 Dates For 'A Midsummer's Night With The Monkees'

The Huffington Post | By Cavan Sieczkowski

Hey, hey: The Monkees are set to hit the road again this summer for a 24-run tour called "A Midsummer's Night With the Monkees."

The Monkees will kick off their tour in July in New York, according to Rolling Stone. Michael Nesmith, Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork will travel to 24 cities in a follow-up to last year's reunion. "The reaction to the last tour was euphoric," Micky Dolenz told Rolling Stone. "It was pretty apparent there was a demand for another one."

But this tour won't focus as much on the late Davy Jones, who died in February of 2012 after suffering a heart attack. "I think we have to move on," Dolenz added to Rolling Stone. "Everybody has to move on. He'll always be remembered and acknowledged, but possibly not as much as on that particular tour. We will, of course, still perform 'Daydream Believer' and all the other hits."

The band's label, Rhino Records, sent out a release announcing the upcoming tour. Tickets will go on sale Friday, May 3 at Monkees.com.

The shows will use music, "rare films" and "one-of-a-kind photographs" to take fans through over three decades of Monkees hits, according to the release. The set list will include tracks like “Last Train To Clarksville,” “I’m A Believer,” “Pleasant Valley Sunday” and “(I’m Not Your) Steppin’ Stone," as well as songs from their most recent album, 1996's "Justus."

"The Monkees" television series debuted in 1966 and introduced to the world to Dolenz, Jones, Nesmith and Tork. Their fame skyrocketed from there, though The Monkees weren't without critics.

"In England, they just got it," Dolenz told Music Radar in 2011. "The Beatles got us. John Lennon said, 'It's like The Marx Brothers.' They got the whole dynamic, the whole sensibility. There were others. Frank Zappa, he was a huge fan. Lots of people in the business got it. Some of the journalists, quite frankly, and even people to this day, there's still some people who don't get it."

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #3 posted 05/22/13 10:20am

funkyslsistah

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I'm going to see them in Saratoga, finally! Of course it will be bittersweet without Davy, but I've been kicking myself for years for not going, so better late than never. Also, it will be the week of my birthday, so it's a gift to myself. biggrin

"Funkyslsistah… you ain't funky at all, you just a little ol' prude"!
"It's just my imagination, once again running away with me."
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Reply #4 posted 05/23/13 11:54am

MickyDolenz

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funkyslsistah said:

I'm going to see them in Saratoga, finally! Of course it will be bittersweet without Davy, but I've been kicking myself for years for not going, so better late than never. Also, it will be the week of my birthday, so it's a gift to myself.

Cool biggrin

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #5 posted 05/25/13 12:15pm

MickyDolenz

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Q&A: Michael Nesmith on Solo Tour and Being the 'Difficult Monkee'

'He's a poet,' says Micky Dolenz at tour stop

APRIL 01, 2013

Michael Nesmith just launched his first U.S. solo tour in 20 years, with a set list emphasizing his post-Monkees career through elegantly performed pop, cosmic cowboy blues and storytelling. At his recent show at the Canyon Club in Agoura Hills, California, Nesmith stood with a 12-string guitar and his four-piece band to link the songs of his four-decade career, both emotionally and thematically.

"It’s not really that long for me," Nesmith told Rolling Stone backstage of his long absence from the stage as a solo artist. "I just don’t go out in public, but I play with these guys."

Exclusive: Michael Nesmith Remembers Davy Jones

During his nearly two-hour set, Nesmith said the songs "play out like little movies in my head," opening with "Papa Gene’s Blues," from the Monkees’ 1966 debut. He followed with early country-folk solo hits and later conceptual works (including 1974’s The Prison) before signing off with a one-song encore of "Thanx for the Ride," which included a sample of an eerie but exciting pedal steel solo by his late collaborator O.J. "Red" Rhodes.

Also backstage afterwards was fellow Monkee Micky Dolenz, smiling beneath a black cowboy hat. "I love his stuff. It’s just so beautiful – he’s a poet," Dolenz told Rolling Stone. "I think my next CD is going to be Dolenz Does Nesmith."

We caught up again with Nesmith, 70, by email to talk about the tour, his long career in music and film, and his ongoing role as a Monkee.

This is your first U.S. solo tour since 1992. Why did you stay away from touring as a solo artist for so long?
For me, touring takes a mindset that I wasn't in for many years. A couple of years ago I had an idea that I could see was only realizable on stage in a live performance. And with that thought came the idea that I would like to be out and performing again. So both of those roads led to where I am now.

You seemed to be enjoying yourself onstage.
I am particularly happy with this tour. The technology and tools make this show special and allow me to do things I have never done, so it is more fun by an order of magnitude than the shows that went before.

Though you haven’t toured in many years, you said after your Agoura performance that you actually work with these musicians all the time. What have you been working on?
I have been writing songs mostly and we have been acquainting ourselves with the tech of the times. There are more ways to make music now than ever and sounds and ideas that can be realized that were out of reach. So I have been marching up that learning curve – and writing to the new forms.

You opened your show with a Monkees song, "Papa Gene’s Blues."
It was one of the first songs I ever wrote and it has an idea at its core and a structure to the chords that spontaneously assembled in my mind. I also like the idea that it was acceptable to the producers of the Monkees show who were mainly interested in commercial hits. It was all a learning experience that taught me lessons I still use.

Storytelling was an important part of your performance. What inspired that?
Storytelling is an important idea for me and it is not limited to a narrative – for me a story only needs a point of view, and perhaps a point, in order to unfold the deeper meanings of events. Stories are expanded metaphors in a certain sense. I have never shared that sense of a story with an audience before. I was scared away from it because I didn't think people would be interested.

"Joanne" and "Silver Moon" got a particularly warm response from the crowd. What do those early solo songs mean to you now?
They are from a simpler time and have a primitive look and feel to me. I love them both and try to express them in larger and more expansive ways. They are complementary to each other so that is why I put them together side by side in the show and in the introductory vignette.

When you brought steel guitar and other country elements into your rock sound after the Monkees, did you feel like you were blazing a trail?
Very far from it. Those sounds were natural elements of music for me and did not belong to a genre – I was just writing songs that had good use of those elements, and Red was a gifted player who made the pedal steel fit right in to the songs I wrote. It never occurred to me that it was all that different. I still work with a steel player and am delighted at how well the instrument fits with the songs I write.

Your group then, the First National Band, is now recalled very fondly. What was the reaction like at the time?
The reaction at the time was awful. We were ridiculed and mocked – some of that may have been Monkees backlash from people who despised the Monkees and at that time – and maybe still – were in a majority. But I think there is something associated with the blues when it works its way into a more complex song that triggers a response more like confusion than a warm reception. Whatever it was, the rejection was hard to take, and it ultimately brought FNB to a halt. The records were not successful and the live shows were not subscribed so it became impossible to proceed. The songs of course live on and I was and am happy with them and satisfied with them.

Have perceptions of that music changed?
I am not sure that music is even around anymore. There is folk music and so forth and country has morphed into a kind of power pop – but the new music – the new sonics and the way music is incorporated into our lives is profoundly different. The music that finds its way forward always needs a solid spiritual foundation to be relevant, and in that way the presentations can conform to the songs and the songs to the presentations. In the end, music is a voice unique to the time and place and individual, so the perceptions of the past must change to accommodate it.

You closed your set with a sample from Red Rhodes, which brought an additional cosmic element to the night. What inspired you to bring him into your set?
That was a product of the technology – a "because we can" moment.

When you released Elephant Parts in 1981, you were a real pioneer by creating an album in a video format. What led you to match music and images so strongly?
It was natural like food and fire. Songs play in my mind as do scenes and pictures and they have a natural and easy synchronicity. The points I watch to see connect are spiritual – the thought value of a word and the thought value of a picture – when they match, it is harmonious and unavoidable.

In an interview a few years ago, you jokingly called yourself "the difficult Monkee who won't talk about his Monkee past." How do you really feel about your years as a Monkee in the context of your overall career?
I don't know whether I called myself that or was pointing out that others called me that, but my sense of the Monkees has stayed fairly consistent over the years. The Monkees belong to the people and the fans and not to me – and I don't think they ever can be a part of me in that way. I am forever grateful and happy for the association and feel it is positive and beneficial in my life. In the context of my overall career the Monkees experience is a substantial and welcome part of the puzzle.

Your songwriting and music career began before you became a part of the Monkees, and some of those songs were recorded successfully by others, including "Different Drum" by Linda Rondstadt. Where would your career have gone if you hadn’t been a Monkee?
I don't think it could have gone any other way – at some point all of this is a question mark.

Did your experience in the Monkees have any creative impact on what you later did as a solo artist?
It had a great affect on my understanding of craft and the availability of tools. It also gave me a good look at talented people I would never have known otherwise.

How was your experience returning to the Monkees for a full tour last year?
It was a blast – really fun – a lot of hard work – but the connection with the Monkees fans was salutary and happy.

What were your feelings on the road last year with the absence of Davy Jones?
It was different but not morbidly sad. We all know that these are the turns life takes and are the roads everyone walks at some point.

Micky Dolenz was backstage at your show. Will more Monkees tours or music be coming?
We are lifelong friends and our paths regularly cross – I am happy to perform again with M&P [Dolenz and Peter Tork].

This month, a film adaptation of "Veronica Mars" raised $4 million from fans through Kickstarter. If you’d had that option during your days as an independent producer of films like Repo Man and Tapeheads, would you have been tempted to use it?
Yes – Kickstarter is a wonderful idea and a near-perfect center of the new economics IMO.

How do you think crowdsource funding will change the future of indie film?
I am not a fan of UGC [User-Generated Content] – there is a level of craft that must be learned and a type of dedication to an art that takes a focus and sacrifice of other aims. UGC gives the impression that anyone can be Mozart, but this is obviously not true, so the question becomes "will crowdsourcing bring Mozart forward?" I don't have an answer for that. My intuition tells me no. The Mozarts among us create their own paths.

What are your plans after this tour is over?
Many roads are converging and new ones are appearing – stimulating new projects and ideas – songs music videos movies all fit. I see this new landscape as virtual and Net delivered revealing a new topography of thought. I will need to get some better shoes.

Rolling Stone

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #6 posted 06/23/13 6:39pm

MickyDolenz

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You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #7 posted 06/24/13 11:54am

MickyDolenz

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You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #8 posted 06/30/13 12:16pm

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #9 posted 07/10/13 12:21pm

JoeBala

Michael Nesmith of the Monkees performs in Los Angeles, California.
Jonathan Leibson/WireImage
July 10, 2013 12:30 PM ET

People have a lot of misconceptions about Michael Nesmith. They think he resents being known as the Monkee in the green wool hat. They think he's a recluse. They think he had some sort of feud with Davy Jones, and they think he retired from music a long, long time ago.

Some of these misconceptions thrive because he does so few interviews. But as he prepares for his second straight Monkees tour (kicking off July 15th in Port Chester, New York), Nesmith called in to Rolling Stone to talk about his newfound commitment to the group, the possibility of a new Monkees album, his pivotal role in the creation of MTV and to set the record straight about his relationship with Davy Jones.

A lot of times when I see your name in print, they describe you as "reclusive."
[Laughs] First off, I'm not sure that's accurate. I'm not reclusive in the least. But second, I don't really know. The press used to – not that you would know this – but do you think the press is used to having their calls answered any time they make them? Why would they think I was reclusive? Do you have any idea?

Well, for all those years people only saw three Monkees onstage. You were nowhere to be seen. I think people sort of extrapolated from there and assumed you were this reclusive figure.
I'm not the least bit reclusive. I love being with people, and I love society and I love civilization and all the accoutrements. I think we're all here for each other. I don't mind if they think of me like that – "they" being the press and the media – but I don't feel that way. I don't know it anyplace in my thinking.

The Top 25 Teen Idol Breakout Moments: The Monkees, 1967

You're also called a "country rock pioneer," but I know you don't like that label either.

I'm not even sure what "country rock" is. There's sub-genre after sub-genre of rap and hip-hop music, and then there's sub-genre after sub-genre of punk rock music. It goes on ad infinitum. So I think the lines aren't very clear. But even if they were clearer, I still don't know exactly what they mean. I played what I thought of as country music at the time. Not country music in the country-western sense of Patsy Cline and Hank Williams, but certainly the kind of country music that I played in the First National Band I thought of as country music.

But it has to be flattering that your solo work is considered influential.
Well, I appreciate that, yes. Flattering is probably not the right word. But it's gratifying, certainly.

In the past year you're gone on a solo tour, a Monkees tour, and now another Monkees tour is coming. What brought you back to the stage after being gone for so long?
Well, the reason I'm keeping on with it is because it's fun. I had a great time on my solo tour. I had a great time on the Monkees tour. And the reason I hadn't done it before is because I was busy with other things. But I'm not so busy now. Also, I don't have the same distractions that I once did.

There was also a confluence of natural events where it was easy to jump in and start up. Micky [Dolenz] and Peter [Tork] were not the only ones asking to see if I wanted to go out and play again. A bunch of musicians that I had played with over the years – Nashville cats and guys from San Francisco – said they wanted to go play.

It started slowly, in the U.K., and messing around at the Henry Miller Library. The more I did it, the more I liked it – the more fun it was. I don't know how long it'll last or how long I can continue to do business, but for right now I'm having a great time, and I'm looking forward to the Monkees summer tour. I'm doing a Nez fall tour. I'm just loading my calendar up and having a great time.

I feel like the Monkees tours are more appreciated now than they've ever been. Do you feel that way too?
Actually I don't know. Why do you think that?

I think people were dismissive in the Sixties because it started as a TV show and they were marketed to children, but as the years have gone by that baggage is gone and people realize just how many great songs you guys created – and not just the obvious big hits. There's somewhat of a critical consensus that the material was overlooked for too long.
Well, you're right about us having a contextual burden. I don't know what grew up around the Monkees, but there was a real pushback. That's better off left to the academics than to me.

The Monkees are a product of television, and television is where its impact happened, and the records followed along. I'm proud of the records and happy to have been part of the records. It was clearly as good a team making records as you could put together at the time, so as time has gone, on the quality of the work has come more into light than the context of the times it was made. I don't know, though. That's just me wild-guessing. I'm just throwing up balls here.

A lot of people assumed you resented being seen as an ex-Monkee, but that doesn't seem to be the case at all.
No, quite the contrary. It was a nice part of the resume. It was a fun for me, and a great time of my life. I mean, where do you want be in the Sixties except the middle of rock & roll, hanging out with the scene? London was an absolute blast, and so was L.A. back then. There was so much going on back then.

You briefly rejoined the Monkees for an album and tour in 1997, but you quit after only a few dates in England. What happened there?

It was just a divergence of paths more than anything else. Micky, Peter and Davy just had their sails blowing in different ways than me.

Did you talk much to the guys in the past decade, or stay close with them in any way?
What do you mean by "close?" We're lifelong friends. I've known these guys for 45 years, or whatever it's been. We talk regularly. It's infrequent, but regularly.

Are you surprised there's so much interest in seeing you guys after all this time?
I think we all have a lot to learn about that. Look at the guys who've been around all this time, playing at stadiums and stuff. We were always more television than anything else. If you look at the start of the television age, which was 1950, there was still enough TVs to count. Then in 1966, when the show came on the air, we had an audience that had never not known television. It had a huge effect inside that medium in a way that's very hard to understand and measure.

I'm from a different time, before television. I listened to radio, but as it matured through the years it locked into a place in people's childhood and people's thinking. But I'm not enough of a researcher to give you any sort of solid answer. I certainly don't understand the sociology of it. I don't know. Did you see the show the last time around?

I did.
What do you think?

I had a blast at the Beacon Theater show. There was so much energy in the crowd.
Yeah. That's why I want to go do it again. It was so much fun. The people that come, they bring their expectations, and we give them exactly what they want, so that's perfect. I don't know what they're bringing in the door, but I'm happy to see them.

I think a big part of the excitement is just seeing you perform, because it's been so long.
Seeing me in that context. I've been seeable for a long time. It was just that no one was looking where I was.

Are you still going to present the songs in chronological order like you did on the last tour?
Pretty much. We're taking out a few things and putting in a few things, but the set list will be awfully close. We're gonna tweak the video a bit. We found some funnier footage, and we're probably gonna take out one or two pieces of the Head thing so it's not quite so long. We are also planning to add an acoustic section with just acoustic guitar and vocals.

Can you explain the early role you took in creating MTV?
Well, I had done a music video. I didn't know what I was doing since this was a music video before there were music videos. That's hard for people to understand. It's like five year-olds that don't know about life before iPads. But long before music videos, you still needed to promote records, so I made a promotional film for one of my records called Rio. After that there was a very natural train of thought – "Well, what do I do with this thing?"

I said to people, "It's a promotional film. They play it on state television in Europe." People would look at me like I was a bug and I'd say, "I just made it for that. I don't know what it is." But then as it became obvious that it was an art form, more people started make them after seeing Rio. They started making them spontaneously and I kept thinking, "Where do you play this? What would I do with this?" The answer was that I simply needed to complete the equation. "Radio is to records as television is to video." Then it was like, "Of course!" and thus MTV was born. I just took that idea and put together some programs and sent it over to Warner Bros. and so forth. Next thing you know, there it was.

What do you think of the current MTV?
Well, it's nothing like what we put together back then, so I really don't know. I don't watch it. Is it any good?

Ummm . . . Most of it is reality programming about pregnant teenagers and whatnot.
[Laughs] Oh. No. I don't . . . That wasn't what we were doing back then. It was all music and music video-based.

Are you thinking about taking the Monkees to Europe and doing more dates with them after this summer leg in America?
I'm certainly not opposed to it. I don't have any notion that there's even a market for it. It would depend on how the three of us felt. But I'm not opposed to it. It would be fun. It's fun playing those songs with those guys in this kind of show. I would enjoy it. I'd also enjoy going over there solo. My solo career has always been very, very different from the Monkees experience. I know we're in a global time, so I certainly think about it that way. There's no resistance from me.

How's your eyesight?
Oh, it's good now. I can see perfect.

Nice. I read that you had problems.
Problems! Yeah, I'd say I had a problem. It's called blindness! I was blind. I couldn't see.

Oh.
It was just cataracts. I had let it go for years. I knew it was coming. I sat there for two or three years and it just got worse and worse and worse. By the time I did the Marfa show, I couldn't see at all. The whole world turned into a Monet painting, which sounds like fun – but after a while being indistinct is no good. And then I was legally blind. I couldn't see, so I had to do something. It was a quick fix, and it was great.

I spoke with Micky Dolenz a few months ago, and he's interested in making a new Monkees album. Are you open to that?
Sure. It's a weird time for the music business, and particularly a weird time for us. I don't even know what a song is these days. I mean, it doesn't look like a pop song of the Sixties. It doesn't look like a pop song of the Seventies. And so it would be hard to understand what to do and how to play it and how to put together the team to produce that sort of stuff.

At my solo shows I've got, almost, and I might start carrying one, a DJ. We're doing a lot of stuff that we do with Ableton Live, and we do it with a lot of syncs and samples and stuff that fit with the songs, and then I do them cinematically. And I think that something like that could be a lot of fun to do with the guys. But I don't know whether we'd ever go back on film or anything. So that component being gone is odd for me. That's such a big part of who we are.

Right. But you are open to the idea of a new album at some point?
I'm always open. I would not say "no" without giving it a good look.

Some fans are under the impression that you didn't get along well with Davy Jones, and you didn't participate in the recent Monkees reunions because of issues you had with him. Is that true at all, or just Internet garbage?
That's just garbage. No. That doesn't have anything to do with anything other than just scheduling and times and so on and so forth. No, we had . . . We were fine. We could . . . We worked together for years and years, just fine.

He'd occasionally say things in the press that weren't very kind about you . . .
Well, maybe he did and maybe he didn't. You know what I'm saying? So unless he said it to you, which he may have . . .

No. I never spoke to him.
I don't know. I mean . . . people start to spin out these speculative issues. They make them into more than they are, and they ask you questions that they think are salient or to a point, and I'm always surprised. It's like, "Where do you get this stuff? You just obviously don't have a clue." I mean, I can see how people can build a case for almost anything they want to be true. In science, it's called a "confirmation bias."

They just figure, "Well, they don't get along, therefore . . . " And it's like, "Well, wait a minute. Who said we didn't get along? We get along fine."

I guess there's just so much misinformation out there.
Yeah. I don't understand. It's information that people act on as well.

But in terms of what I can tell you, David and I didn't have any problems. We worked together just fine. And you know, the three of us get together for a big hug before we go onstage. So did the four of us, as long as David was there. We'd all stand and huddle, give each other a hug. We had a little chant, and we'd go onstage.

We were not brothers or especially close, but we were good, solid, professional workers and companions, and it was a harmonious workspace. And it was an arduous and difficult production, and we had to do things that were hard to do, but we got along just fine.

Do you see yourself doing this for a while longer, or is your time as an active Monkee coming to an end?
Well, I'm clearly in my endgame. I mean, we're not talking about deciding to do something else. We're talking about dying. [Laughs] So I don't know. Who knows where that is? That's somewhere . . . that door is coming up. I can't make it out on the horizon just yet. But at a certain point it's going to be time for me to say, "Eh, I think I'll lay down."

But no plans to do that anytime soon?
Not right now. Right now I'm gonna get some pizza.

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Reply #10 posted 07/11/13 10:36am

MickyDolenz

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JoeBala said:

I spoke with Micky Dolenz a few months ago, and he's interested in making a new Monkees album. Are you open to that?
Sure. It's a weird time for the music business, and particularly a weird time for us. I don't even know what a song is these days. I mean, it doesn't look like a pop song of the Sixties. It doesn't look like a pop song of the Seventies. And so it would be hard to understand what to do and how to play it and how to put together the team to produce that sort of stuff.

At my solo shows I've got, almost, and I might start carrying one, a DJ. We're doing a lot of stuff that we do with Ableton Live, and we do it with a lot of syncs and samples and stuff that fit with the songs, and then I do them cinematically. And I think that something like that could be a lot of fun to do with the guys. But I don't know whether we'd ever go back on film or anything. So that component being gone is odd for me. That's such a big part of who we are.

That would be kind of like those 'Fireman' records by Paul McCartney I guess.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #11 posted 07/16/13 4:19pm

JoeBala

^^Huh? not sure what you mean?

Rob Sheffield

July 16, 2013 2:45 PM ET

Here's a sight Monkees fans have spent years dreaming about: Michael Nesmith playing his trademark 12-string Gretsch guitar, looking regal in a white jacket and glitter-covered shoes, playing the holy hell out of "Sweet Young Thing." Right next to Peter Tork on banjo, while Micky Dolenz keeps time on a suitcase with a couple of drumsticks. Papa Nez back onstage with the other surviving Monkees? At last. It brought out the sweet young thing in a crowd of diehard Monkees freaks, the kind who can whistle along with the intro to "Tapioca Tundra."

Readers' Poll: The Best Monkees Songs of All Time

The Monkees kicked off their summer tour last night at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York, and it was a momentously festive occasion. The last time Nesmith tried playing with the band, back in 1997, it was by all accounts a drag – he quit after just a handful of European gigs. Before that, they hadn't toured together since the Sixties. But last fall, the three surviving Monkees reconnected in the wake of Davy Jones' tragic death, playing a few select dates. As Nesmith told Rolling Stone's Andy Greene, "Now is the time."

Their music has been everywhere lately, showing up on two of the past year's most intense TV moments. Breaking Bad scored a Walter White meth-lab montage to "Goin' Down," while Don Draper bottomed out to "Porpoise Song," in a Mad Men episode full of Head references. The Monkees included both these scenes in their pre-show video montage. (Although they unfortunately left out Micky Dolenz's cameo in Syfy's proto-Sharknado classic, Mega-Python vs. Gatoroid.)

They also screened loads of Sixties video footage, proving among other things that nobody beats the Nez's mastery of the Sixties fashion game. The man was to tan suede coats with wool collars what Beethoven was to sonatas. Needless to say, Nesmith hats were on sale at the merch table. (There were also cards promoting the Davy Jones Equine Memorial Foundation, started last year by his daughters.)

The Top 25 Teen Idol Breakout Moments: The Monkees

Papa Nez was in hearty spirits all night, holding court in eternally fantastic psychedelic-cowboy classics like "Sunny Girlfriend," "You Told Me" and "You Just May Be The One." He brought down the house with "Listen To The Band," the greatest non-Creedence Creedence song ever, and "What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round," which as always sounds like it could have been a lost Bob Dylan/Carole King collabo. After so many years, the Monkees freaks in the house were hungry to hear Nesmith play these songs with the band – and maybe so was Nesmith.

The set emphasized 1967's Headquarters, their finest album. (Although if you wanted to argue it was really Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd., you'd probably win.) Peter Tork sang a touching "Early Morning Blues and Greens," then turned into a California golden god in "For Pete's Sake." He also went Full Tork on slide guitar, adding a bluesy solo to "The Kind Of Girl I Could Love." Micky Dolenz banged the timpani for "Randy Scouse Git" after donning an awesome dashiki – or as Nesmith cracked, "Maybe it's just curtains." (Question: Is the social-climbing groupie in "Steppin' Stone" the same girl Robert Plant sings about in Led Zeppelin's "Black Dog"? They have remarkably similar skill sets.)

The Monkees' 45th Anniversary Tour, just two years ago, was a career-summing triumph. But it turned out to be the final go-round for the late great Davy Jones. So seeing the other three get it together to pay their respects to these songs was deeply moving as well as historic. This was the right thing to do, and they did it in the right way. They never mentioned Davy by name, but there was a touching memorial interlude when they left the stage and screened his solo tap-dancing showcase from Head, "Daddy's Song." It was a graceful tribute to the Davy Jones school of showmanship and the Davy Jones way of life. For "Daydream Believer," Micky pulled a fan out of the audience to sing. As he explained, "None of us can really sing this song because it doesn't belong to us anymore. It belongs to you." And so do the Monkees.

Set List:
"Last Train To Clarksville"
"Papa Gene's Blues"
"Your Auntie Grizelda"
"The Kind Of Girl I Could Love"
"She"
"Sweet Young Thing"
"I'm a Believer"
"(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone"
"You Told Me"
"Sunny Girlfriend"
"You Just May Be the One"
"Mary, Mary"
"The Girl I Knew Somewhere"
"Early Morning Blues And Greens"
"Randy Scouse Git"
"For Pete's Sake"
"No Time"
"Words"
"Daily Nightly"
"Tapioca Tundra"
"Goin' Down"
"Porpoise Song"
"Can You Dig It? "
"Circle Sky"
"As We Go Along"
"Daddy's Song"
"Long Title: Do I Have to Do This All Over Again"
"Daydream Believer"
"What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?"

Encore:
"Listen To The Band"
"Peter Percival Patterson's Pet Pig Porky"
"Pleasant Valley Sunday"

[Edited 7/16/13 16:23pm]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #12 posted 07/17/13 8:07pm

MickyDolenz

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JoeBala said:

^^Huh? not sure what you mean?

Paul released 3 albums under the name "The Fireman". What Mike Nesmith was talking about kinda sounds like a similar idea.

Mike released an album in 2006 called Rays and it has a dance like track:

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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