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RIP Davy Jones (Read 6,361 times)
Teiz
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #25 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 3:39pm
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I remember watching the show on Sky Channel (a rerun channel in the 80s in Europe) and I liked that as a kid. Fell a bit off the radar for me after that, but those famous tunes are always appreciated and always will be..

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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #26 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm
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Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #27 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 5:56pm
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A casual fan once asked me why Mick stopped playing maracas onstage.


I thought for a minute and answered, "He put them down at just about the time that Davy Jones picked them up on TV."


Who says there's no connection?
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That guy that punched Mick at Altamont...and all the Hell's Angels...all that bad acid let them hear A Bigger Bang!!
 
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #28 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 6:11pm
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Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH



Lol, I was kinda thinking the same thing....but, hey! I was 14. I had a more diverse musical palate back then... Wink Besides, some of the songs were great pop songs, written by great songwriters! And it was just fun seeing "pop" stars on a 1/2 hour comedy/music show... Wink
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #29 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 6:11pm
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andrews27 wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 5:56pm:
A casual fan once asked me why Mick stopped playing maracas onstage.


I thought for a minute and answered, "He put them down at just about the time that Davy Jones picked them up on TV."


Who says there's no connection?



Ha ha! Yeah.... Tongue
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #30 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 6:16pm
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Just because you like something does not mean you think it's great Art...........or Music
You Just Like it for what it is!
...
I liked them and I knew it was, what it was, it's like Professional Wrestling..... I love it ,do I think it's real................. Yes! Blank Frigging Stare
Real good entertainment! Doo'h
Now let the beating begin! The real Rolling Stones tongue
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #31 - Mar 2nd, 2012 at 10:31pm
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Davy Jones, you were such a cute little adoreable Monkey, and I guess you took your last train to Clarksville!  RIP
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #32 - Mar 4th, 2012 at 12:09am
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If anyone  is interested The Antenna Network is running
The Movie, this weekend, Sunday night here in Mickville.........I'll supply the beer and Popcorn.......
...
There are some very interesting actors in the credits!
And JACK wrote...........
Writing credits
Bob Rafelson            (written by) and
Jack Nicholson            (written by)

Cast (in credits order) verified as complete
     Peter Tork      ...      Peter
     Davy Jones      ...      Davy (as David Jones)
     Micky Dolenz      ...      Micky
     Michael Nesmith      ...      Mike
     Annette Funicello      ...      Minnie
     Timothy Carey      ...      Lord High 'n Low
     Logan Ramsey      ...      Off. Faye Lapid
     Abraham Sofaer      ...      Swami
     Vito Scotti      ...      I. Vitteloni
     Charles Macaulay      ...      Inspector Shrink
     T.C. Jones      ...      Mr. and Mrs. Ace
     Charles Irving      ...      Mayor Feedback
     William Bagdad      ...      Black Sheik
     Percy Helton      ...      Heraldic Messenger
     Sonny Liston      ...      Extra
     Ray Nitschke      ...      Private One

     Carol Doda      ...      Sally Silicone
     Frank Zappa      ...      The Critic
     June Fairchild      ...      The Jumper
     Teri Garr      ...      Testy True (as Terry Garr)
     I.J. Jefferson      ...      Lady Pleasure
     Victor Mature      ...      The Big Victor
     Terry Chambers      ...      Oreh (as Srebmahc Yrret)
     Mike Burns      ...      Gnihton (as Snrub Ekim)
     Esther Shepard      ...      Rehtom (as Drapehs Rehtse)
     Kristine Helstoski      ...      Dneirf Lrig (as Iksotsleh Enitsirk)
     John Hoffman      ...      Dneifxes Eht (as Namffoh Nhoj)
     Linda Weaver      ...      Yraterces Revol (as Revaew Adnil)
     Jim Hanley      ...      Frodis (as Yelnah Mij)
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
     Jon C. Andersen      ...      Himself (uncredited)
     Rona Barrett      ...      Herself (uncredited)
     Toni Basil      ...      Daddy's Song Dancer (uncredited)
     John Dennis      ...      Policeman (uncredited)
     Sam Flint      ...      Old Man (uncredited)
     Linda Haines      ...      Surprise Party Guest (uncredited)
     Dennis Hopper      ...      Long haired guy at filmshoot in restaurant - extra (uncredited)
     Tor Johnson      ...      Guard (uncredited)
     Valerie Kairys      ...      Spectator - Jumping Girl Scene (uncredited)
     Helena Kallianiotes      ...      Belly Dancer (uncredited)
     Kenner G. Kemp      ...      On-Looker (uncredited)
     Tiger Joe Marsh      ...      Security Guard (uncredited)
     Phyllis Barbour Nesmith      ...      Surprise Party Guest (uncredited)
     Ngoc Loan Nguyen      ...      Himself - Executioner (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Van Lem Nguyen      ...      Himself - Executed Viet Cong soldier (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Jack Nicholson      ...      Movie director at filmshoot in restaurant (uncredited)
     The Radio City Rockettes      ...      Themselves (uncredited)
     Bob Rafelson      ...      Himself (uncredited)
     Ronald Reagan      ...      Himself (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Hal Taggart      ...      On-Looker (uncredited)
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« Last Edit: Mar 4th, 2012 at 12:14am by Kilroy »  

The Core Of The Rolling Stones is Charlie Watts Hi-Hat/The Sunshine Bores The Daylights Out Of Me/And Then We Became Naked/After the Skeet Shoot & Sweet Dreams Mary & #9 11/22/1968 @#500 2/19/2010 @#800 4/09/2011 @#888 10/28/2011 @#1000 2/2/12
 
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #33 - Mar 4th, 2012 at 9:53pm
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Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH


You got a problem with that?
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #34 - Mar 4th, 2012 at 11:12pm
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Kilroy wrote on Mar 4th, 2012 at 12:09am:
If anyone  is interested The Antenna Network is running
The Movie, this weekend, Sunday night here in Mickville.........I'll supply the beer and Popcorn.......
...
There are some very interesting actors in the credits!
And JACK wrote...........
Writing credits
Bob Rafelson            (written by) and
Jack Nicholson            (written by)

Cast (in credits order) verified as complete
     Peter Tork      ...      Peter
     Davy Jones      ...      Davy (as David Jones)
     Micky Dolenz      ...      Micky
     Michael Nesmith      ...      Mike
     Annette Funicello      ...      Minnie
     Timothy Carey      ...      Lord High 'n Low
     Logan Ramsey      ...      Off. Faye Lapid
     Abraham Sofaer      ...      Swami
     Vito Scotti      ...      I. Vitteloni
     Charles Macaulay      ...      Inspector Shrink
     T.C. Jones      ...      Mr. and Mrs. Ace
     Charles Irving      ...      Mayor Feedback
     William Bagdad      ...      Black Sheik
     Percy Helton      ...      Heraldic Messenger
     Sonny Liston      ...      Extra
     Ray Nitschke      ...      Private One

     Carol Doda      ...      Sally Silicone
     Frank Zappa      ...      The Critic
     June Fairchild      ...      The Jumper
     Teri Garr      ...      Testy True (as Terry Garr)
     I.J. Jefferson      ...      Lady Pleasure
     Victor Mature      ...      The Big Victor
     Terry Chambers      ...      Oreh (as Srebmahc Yrret)
     Mike Burns      ...      Gnihton (as Snrub Ekim)
     Esther Shepard      ...      Rehtom (as Drapehs Rehtse)
     Kristine Helstoski      ...      Dneirf Lrig (as Iksotsleh Enitsirk)
     John Hoffman      ...      Dneifxes Eht (as Namffoh Nhoj)
     Linda Weaver      ...      Yraterces Revol (as Revaew Adnil)
     Jim Hanley      ...      Frodis (as Yelnah Mij)
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
     Jon C. Andersen      ...      Himself (uncredited)
     Rona Barrett      ...      Herself (uncredited)
     Toni Basil      ...      Daddy's Song Dancer (uncredited)
     John Dennis      ...      Policeman (uncredited)
     Sam Flint      ...      Old Man (uncredited)
     Linda Haines      ...      Surprise Party Guest (uncredited)
     Dennis Hopper      ...      Long haired guy at filmshoot in restaurant - extra (uncredited)
     Tor Johnson      ...      Guard (uncredited)
     Valerie Kairys      ...      Spectator - Jumping Girl Scene (uncredited)
     Helena Kallianiotes      ...      Belly Dancer (uncredited)
     Kenner G. Kemp      ...      On-Looker (uncredited)
     Tiger Joe Marsh      ...      Security Guard (uncredited)
     Phyllis Barbour Nesmith      ...      Surprise Party Guest (uncredited)
     Ngoc Loan Nguyen      ...      Himself - Executioner (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Van Lem Nguyen      ...      Himself - Executed Viet Cong soldier (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Jack Nicholson      ...      Movie director at filmshoot in restaurant (uncredited)
     The Radio City Rockettes      ...      Themselves (uncredited)
     Bob Rafelson      ...      Himself (uncredited)
     Ronald Reagan      ...      Himself (archive footage) (uncredited)
     Hal Taggart      ...      On-Looker (uncredited)



Watched it {again}.  Also, they were running a Monkee marathon, so I watched a bunch of the shows. Hadn't seen them in a number of years. Really brought on a nostalgic feeling tonight...
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #35 - Mar 5th, 2012 at 2:20pm
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Child of the Moon wrote on Mar 4th, 2012 at 9:53pm:
Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH


You got a problem with that?


A problem with what? That Americans are funny people? Absolutely not, but I'm getting really scared now. Ok, Americans are not funny people!
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #36 - Mar 5th, 2012 at 7:05pm
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Oh yes we are!
...
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« Last Edit: Mar 5th, 2012 at 7:16pm by Kilroy »  

The Core Of The Rolling Stones is Charlie Watts Hi-Hat/The Sunshine Bores The Daylights Out Of Me/And Then We Became Naked/After the Skeet Shoot & Sweet Dreams Mary & #9 11/22/1968 @#500 2/19/2010 @#800 4/09/2011 @#888 10/28/2011 @#1000 2/2/12
 
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #37 - Mar 8th, 2012 at 3:34pm
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Exclusive: Michael Nesmith Remembers Davy Jones
'For me David was The Monkees. They were his band. We were his side men.'
Comment 16
By Andy Greene
March 8, 2012 11:40 AM ET
Michael Nesmith
...
Michael Nesmith performs in Marfa, Texas.
Courtesy of Michael Nesmith

Michael Nesmith (best known as the Monkee in the green wool hat) has largely stayed out of the limelight since the group split over forty years ago, though he released a series of acclaimed country-rock albums in the early 1970s and helped lay the groundwork for MTV in the early 1980s. His mother invented Liquid Paper, and left him the bulk of her massive fortune – giving him little incentive to join the Monkees on their many reunion tours. In 1996, however, he shocked fans by reuniting with the band for the album Justus and a brief European tour the next year. That was the last time he spent any real time with Davy Jones, but the singer's death brought back a flood of memories and he agreed to speak with Rolling Stone through e-mail.

What's your first memory of meeting Davy?
I think, not certainly, that I met him on the stage where we were doing the screen tests. He seemed confident and part of the proceedings, charming, outgoing.

It's clear the producers cast each of you for different reasons. Why do you think they selected Davy? What did he bring to the group that was unique?
I think David was the first one selected and they built the show around him. English (all the rage), attractive, and a very accomplished singer and dancer, right off the Broadway stage from a hit musical. None of the other three of us had any of those chops.

Is there one anecdote that stands out in your mind that personifies Monkee-mania at its peak?
It was nonstop from the moment the show aired, so there was a constant hyper-interest in the group of us – the meter was maxxed and stayed that way for a couple of years. Once in Cleveland we strayed from our bodyguards into the plaza where a train station, or some public transport hub, was letting out thousands of fans for the concert we were on the way to give. They spotted David and the chase was on. We were like the rabbit – fleeing in blind panic. We saw a police car and jumped in the back seat, blip, blip, blip, blip, – squashed together shoulder to shoulder in our concert duds, and slammed the door just as the tsunami of pink arms closed over the car's windows. We were relieved. The cops were freaked out. They drove us to the station and our guys picked us up and we did the show. But it was like that when the four of us were together, Davy in front – pandemonium. One missed step and we were running.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but the story tends to go that you (and to a slightly lesser extent Peter) got frustrated pretty early on with your lack of control over the Monkees music. Davy had a Broadway background and was pretty used to following orders. Did he share your frustrations at first? If not, explain how his views evolved to the point that he was eager to join your battle against Kirshner and the label.
You are not completely wrong, but "frustrated" is the wrong word. We were confused, especially me. But all of us shared the desire to play the songs we were singing. Everyone was accomplished – the notion I was the only musician is one of those rumors that got started and wont stop – but it was not true. Peter was a more accomplished player than I by an order of magnitude, Micky and Davy played and sang and danced and understood music.  Micky had learned to play drums, and we were quite capable of playing the type of songs that were selected for the show. We were also kids with our own taste in music and were happier performing songs we liked – and/or wrote – than songs that were handed to us. It made for a better performance. It was more fun. That this became a bone of contention seemed strange to me, and I think to some extent to each of us – sort of "what's the big deal – why wont you let us play the songs we are singing?" This confusion of course betrayed an ignorance of the powers that were and the struggle that was going on for control between the show's producers in Hollywood and the New York-based publishing company owned by Screen Gems. The producers backed us and David went along. None of us could have fought the battles we did without the explicit support of the show's producers.

Some have described the movie Head as "career suicide." How did you feel about it at the time? Did you have concerns that it would alienate and confuse a huge segment of your audience? Looking back, was it a mistake?
Looking back it was inevitable. Don't forget that by the time Head came out the Monkees were a pariah. There was no confusion about this. We were on the cosine of the line of approbation, from acceptance to rejection – the cause for this is another discussion not for here – and it was basically over. Head was a swan song. We wrote it with Jack and Bob – another story not for here – and we liked it. It was an authentic representation of a phenomenon we were a part of that was winding down. It was very far from suicide – even though it may have looked like that. There were some people in power, and not a few critics, who thought there was another decision that could have been made.  But I believe the movie was an inevitability – there was no other movie to be made that would not have been ghastly under the circumstances.

In your estimation, why did the Monkees burn out so quickly? The whole thing ended after little more than two years.
That is a long discussion – and I can only offer one perspective of a complex pattern of events. The most I care to generalize at this point is to say there was a type of sibling suppression that was taking place unseen. The older sibling followed the Beatles and Stones and the sophistication of a burgeoning new world order – the younger siblings were still playing on the floor watching television. The older siblings sang and danced and shouted and pointed to a direction they assumed the Monkees were not part of and pushed the younger sibling into silence. The Monkees went into that closet. This is all retrospect, of course – important to focus on the premise that "no one thought the Monkees up." The Monkees happened – the effect of a cause still unseen, and dare I say it, still at work and still overlooked as it applies to present day.

Do you think Davy enjoyed the experience of being a Monkee more than you did? If so, why?
I can only speculate. For me David was The Monkees. They were his band. We were his side men. He was the focal point of the romance, the lovely boy, innocent and approachable. Micky was his Bob Hope. In those two – like Hope and Crosby – was the heartbeat of the show.

The incident in which you punched a hole in a wall during a fight with Kirshner has been told so many times over the years it almost feels apocryphal. At the very least, the notion you were fighting about "Sugar Sugar" seems to have been debunked. What's your memory of that incident? Did Davy ever convey a feeling to you were rocking the boat too much after scenes like that?
David continually admonished me to calm down and do what I was told. From day one. His advice to me was to approach the show like a job, do my best, and shut up, take the money, and go home. Micky the same. I had no idea what they were talking about at the time, or why. The hole in the wall had nothing to do with "Sugar Sugar." It was the release of an angry reaction to a personal affront. The stories that circulate are as you say – apocryphal.

Do you have a favorite Davy Jones-sung Monkees song? If so, what makes it your favorite?
"Daydream Believer." The sensibility of the song is [composer] John Stewart at his best, IMHO – it has a beautiful undercurrent of melancholy with a delightful frosting, no taste of bitterness. David's cheery vocal leads us all in a great refrain of living on love alone.

What's your fondest memory of your time with Davy?
He told great jokes. Very nicely developed sense of the absurd – Pythonesque – actually, Beyond the Fringe – but you get my point. We would rush to each other anytime we heard a new joke and tell it to each other and laugh like crazy. David had a wonderful laugh, infectious. He would double up, crouching over his knees, and laugh till he ran out of breath. Whether he told the joke or not. We both did.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/exclusive-michael-nesmith-remembers-davy-...
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #38 - Mar 8th, 2012 at 3:48pm
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A FANTASTIC read...Thanks HoS!!!
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #39 - Mar 8th, 2012 at 7:57pm
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That really is an interesting interview. Smiley Thanks for posting it! Cool
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #40 - Mar 8th, 2012 at 8:06pm
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Thank you..........for this....... On Micky Birthday !
Check out our day in Rock history thread!
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #41 - Mar 12th, 2012 at 8:56am
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Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH


i think this just shows you don't know the monkees' music very well. sure...half of their stuff was bubble gum shite like "the day we fall in love" and "i don't think i'll ever get her off of my mind", but they had some honest to goodness great rock n roll songs like "pleasant valley sunday", "you told me", "daily nightly" and the like.

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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #42 - Mar 12th, 2012 at 9:35pm
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Starbuck wrote on Mar 12th, 2012 at 8:56am:
Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH


i think this just shows you don't know the monkees' music very well. sure...half of their stuff was bubble gum shite like "the day we fall in love" and "i don't think i'll ever get her off of my mind", but they had some honest to goodness great rock n roll songs like "pleasant valley sunday", "you told me", "daily nightly" and the like.



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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #43 - Mar 12th, 2012 at 9:38pm
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Also, thanks for the article, Heart of Stone! It does my heart good to know that Michael has such kind words for his former bandmate... and that he's still willing to talk about such a controversial musical legacy. I hope the man gets back to recording - between Davy's passing and Michael's own recent scary experience with near-blindness, it could very well have catalyzed some songwriting! Michael Nesmith is one of my all-time favorite singer-songwriters, without a doubt. I'd love to hear some more from him.
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #44 - Mar 13th, 2012 at 4:51pm
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Starbuck wrote on Mar 12th, 2012 at 8:56am:
Tumbling Dijs wrote on Mar 2nd, 2012 at 4:35pm:
Really amazing, a Rolling Stones messageboard, where even The Beatles are bashed on a regarly basis turns out to be a board of Monkees lovers. The Monkees for God's sake. Well, Mick Jagger said it already years ago, Americans are funny people. LOL LOL LOL AAAARGH


i think this just shows you don't know the monkees' music very well. sure...half of their stuff was bubble gum shite like "the day we fall in love" and "i don't think i'll ever get her off of my mind", but they had some honest to goodness great rock n roll songs like "pleasant valley sunday", "you told me", "daily nightly" and the like.


Well, it's obvious that you have another definition of rock n roll than I have, that's for sure. But my point is that the whole idea of creating some "American" Beatles, pure for commercial reasons was ridiculous at the time, and by the way still is. I don't know about the US, but in Europe they were maybe appreciated by 11 year old schoolgirls, but most certainly not by Stones fans. The thought alone....... Beside that, what induvidual members did after it was over, has nothing to do with the "phenomenon" Monkees I think.
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #45 - Mar 13th, 2012 at 8:18pm
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'Hail, hail, rock and roll, deliver me from the days of old,' Chuck Berry St Louis Missouri USA Earth   Wink
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #46 - Aug 15th, 2012 at 4:40pm
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I know there are some Monkee fans on here.


Micky Dolenz on the Monkees' Reunion With Michael Nesmith
'It caught us all by surprise,' says Dolenz
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MIcky Dolenz, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork of The Monkees.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
By Andy Greene
August 15, 2012 12:00 PM ET

Earlier this month, Monkees fans got the shocking news that reclusive guitarist Michael Nesmith will hit the road with the surviving members of the band for a fall tour. "It's shocking to us, too," says Monkee drummer-singer Micky Dolenz. "It just caught us all by surprise. It wasn't this massive plan that people had been concocting for years or months or anything. It sort of happened organically."

The band had barely communicated with Nesmith since he walked off a U.K. reunion tour in 1997 after just a handful of dates. "I think he moved back up to Carmel after that," says Dolenz. "There wasn't any strained relations as far as I was concerned. Look, it's impossible to go through something like that and get totally disconnected. It's like a brother. We may not see each other for literally years, and as soon as we get back together we're immediately back into the same dynamic."

Sadly, it took the death of Davy Jones to get the three surviving members of the Monkees back into the same room. "We started talking about doing some sort of memorial show," says Dolenz. "It just sort of escalated from there. It was, 'Well, where do you do the memorial? If you do it on the East coast, the fans on the West coast are disappointed. So, what then? Do we do two memorials?'"

Q&A: Michael Nesmith on His Surprising Return to the Monkees

They ultimately decided that a short tour made the most sense. "As soon as the three of us expressed even the slightest bit of interest there was a lot of interest from others," says Dolenz. "The ball started rolling, and the train left the station. Rhino Records also got very excited and helped us support it."

Details of the show are still coming together, but they plan on using the evening to trace the group's entire history. "We're going to use our music, and also videos and still images from the time," says Dolenz. "We'll start out with the early Boyce and Hart songs, the 'Last Train to Clarksville' stuff, and then morph into Headquarters, which we plan on playing a significant amount of material from. Then we'll do material from the movie Head. I'm really looking forward to that. There are great Mike songs on that. 'Circle Sky' is one of my favorites. I'll be on drums for some of the evening, popping back to the front for some songs. We'll be more stripped down for the Head material, and then fleshed out with a bigger band for some other other material."

The show will also feature a tribute to Davy Jones, and his trademark numbers like "Daydream Believer" will be performed. "It's one of Davy's signature tunes," says Dolenz. "I don't know the specific setlist yet. We're having a pre-production meeting soon. Sometimes records sound great on the radio, but then you try and play them live and something just doesn't work out."

The Monkees recording career was incredibly brief, but in that time they produced an astounding amount of material. "It was brutal," says Dolenz. "They needed so much material to service that television show. They were running at least two songs a week. I remember frequently finishing a taping at 7 p.m. and I had to go to RCA at sunset and record until midnight. I would often do two or three lead vocal takes in a night. This was only four-track recording. No pro-tools. No editing. No nothing. People often ask if I remember recording 'I'm a Believer' or 'Last Train to Clarksville.' I say, 'No way!' I was recording two or three vocals a night. Every night."

As of now, only 12 Monkees dates are booked. Might they hit Europe or other markets next year? "Haven't thought that far ahead," says Dolenz. "There certainly is a fanbase in Europe, and the far east, Australia, South America. It's going to depend on a lot of things and it's way too early to speculate."

Nesmith released a series of acclaimed country-rock albums after the Monkees split in the early 1970s. His mother invented Liquid Paper and left him her fortune, leaving him with very little financial incentive to join the Monkees on most of their reunion tours. His low profile over the past few decades has turned him into somewhat of a mystery man. "Sometimes he enjoys people thinking that," says Dolenz. "He's just a very private person. He's very, very smart. Also so very talented with his lyrics, and his poetry and books. I know what people mean about him being mysterious, but that's probably one of the qualities that the original producers saw in him. He has that dry Will Rogers sense of humor. That's probably one of the reasons they cast him."

As he begins to prep for the tour, Dolenz is also focusing on his new solo album Remember, in stores on September 25th. "I've been working on this for three or four years," says Dolenz. "It features a lot of music that was important in my life. It starts with a cover of 'Good Morning Good Morning' by the Beatles because I was at that session. I do a version of 'Johnny B. Goode' because that was my audition song for the Monkees." The disc also contains re-recordings of Monkees classics "I'm a Believer" and "Randy Scouse Git."

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/micky-dolenz-on-the-monkees-reunion-with-...
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Re: RIP Davy Jones
Reply #47 - Aug 15th, 2012 at 11:13pm
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Cool News, Thanks for bring this thread back, It's got a great photo of me at the "How Many Pumpkins can you hold contest"
Thanks for the News, sad to say Mike was a little late to rejoin when Davy was still with us, But if acts like "The Two" can go on why not the
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« Last Edit: Aug 15th, 2012 at 11:14pm by Kilroy »  

The Core Of The Rolling Stones is Charlie Watts Hi-Hat/The Sunshine Bores The Daylights Out Of Me/And Then We Became Naked/After the Skeet Shoot & Sweet Dreams Mary & #9 11/22/1968 @#500 2/19/2010 @#800 4/09/2011 @#888 10/28/2011 @#1000 2/2/12
 
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