The surviving Monkees, Micky Dolenz,
Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork embarked on a 12-city tour earlier this
month. Each show includes a tribute to the late Davy Jones, with film clips and
an audience member in each city chosen to come up and sing Daydream Believer. The set list features all the pop hits we know
and love - Last Train to Clarksville,
Steppin Stone, Pleasant Valley Sunday, etc.), songs from Headquarters, the psychedelic masterpiece Head and Daily Nightly,
one of the first pop songs to use a Moog synthesizer. In concert, Mike’s hilarious interpretation of Moog sounds substitutes for the real thing.
The current tour resumes Thursday for four last
sold-out shows on the East Coast. There’s
no word on future tour dates for the Monkees, but the boys have other solo projects
in the works. Mike may
launch solo tour for 2013 (according to one of his Facebook status posts) Peter's blues band, Shoe Suede Blues, has a new CD, Step By Step, available at CD Baby. Micky is scheduled to perform at the KLOSChristmas Concert in L.A. and at Walt Disney World in March. Micky’s latest CD Remember, released in October, is
reviewed below.
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Micky Dolenz’s new CD Remember (RoboRecords/Universal
Music) is much
more than a nostalgia trip for the 50 and up set. Younger fans will like it too.
Dolenz and producer David Harris compiled a list of songs that were milestones
in the Monkees -and Micky’s- long and storied career. They put a creative spin
on some iconic songs by the Beatles, Three Dog Night, Chuck Berry, and, of
course, the Monkees.
A breezy reworking of the Beatles’ Good Morning Good Morning kicks off the
album. A lighter, acoustic version, it rolls
along with sunny ease. Micky visited the Beatles when the recording of Sergeant Pepper and John played him a
working version of this song during his visit to Abbey Road Studios in 1967,
and a snippet of the song opened the last Monkees episode, Mijacogeo, which Micky directed.
The Paul Williams penned Just an Old-Fashioned Love Song , a big
hit for Three Dog Night in 1971. Micky originally
turned the song down, but makes up for it on this version. Micky’s soulful take
on this tune, comes complete with some mid-song scatting, ala Cab Calloway.
Neil Diamond’s I’m a Believer is one of the most well-known - and overplayed - pop songs of all-time - that goes for both the Smashmouth’s version from Shrek and the original Monkees hit, but the rockabilly arrangement here makes it fun and fresh. Now I’m listening to this one over and over.
Sugar Sugar, originally brought to the Monkees by Don Kirshner. This song allegedly caused the mutiny that resulted in Kirshner's exit as the Monkees' music director. Cartoon band the Archies (actually singer Ron Dante) charted with the song instead, and the Monkees went on to write and produce their own music on Headquarters. Micky’s jazzy version of Sugar Sugar here is more suggestive than the bubblegum original, with a little dollop of Micky’s trademark humor at the end.
Quiet
Desperation, the only original song on the CD, has all the
markings of 1960s country original – that’s what I thought it was when I first hard
it. Micky wrote this tune, and the phrasings on some of the lyrics are simultaneously comic and poignant.
The album ends with the haunting Remember, written by Micky’s Hollywood
Vampire buddy, Harry Nilsson. The
Monkees gave Nilsson his big break when they recorded his song Cuddly Toy in
1967.
Musicians on the album included Vicki Petersson of the Bangles on rhythm guitar Will Champlin on piano, John Cowsill and Vinnie Colaiuta on drums and Bob Birch on bass. The CD booklet features photos by longtime Monkees photographer Henry Diltz. Kudos to producer David Harris, whose arrangements really bring out the nuances in Micky’s voice. Remember is a great audio time capsule of songs from the 1960s and 1970s. It will evoke memories for older listeners and entertain fans of all ages with its fresh takes on some classic pop tunes.
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