Monday, November 8, 2021

Concert Review: THE MONKEES FAREWELL TOUR - The Mike and Micky Show - THE MONKEES featuring Micky Dolenz and Michael Nesmith

We had the chance to see The Monkees Farewell Tour Friday Night (11/5) when The Mike And Micky Show stopped by The Rosemont Theater.

[Special thanks to David Salidor, Micky’s PR Guy, for helping to make this happen]


Now The Rosemont Theater is a BEAUTIFUL, underused venue in my opinion and the crowd on hand typified the "8 to 80" consensus that we hear about so often these days.  But this WAS The Monkees, after all, who have been discovered by every generation since their TV show first aired in 1966 ... and really DO have fans from 8 to 80.  As such, the souvenir line was absolutely insane and never let up as fans tried to grab up their last few pieces of Monkees farewell memorabilia.  And seriously ... where else can you go these days and pay $5 for a bottle of water and $8 for the very last pretzel that didn't even have a single grain of salt left on it anymore?!?!  $18 for two waters and a shared pretzel ... my dinner cost less than that before the show!  And, you know, that $10 I spent on two bottles of water would have bought THREE CASES of water - 72 bottles - the very next day at Jewel!!!  But hey, we were out to enjoy the evening and that's exactly what we did!!!  (And I'm almost finished complaining about it ... really, I am!)


Who would have ever thought that this young quartet of actors first assembled in 1965 to PRETEND to be a rock band would still be resonating with us some 56 years later, allowing the two surviving members to travel around the globe, playing those same tunes to sold-out audiences everywhere they go.

 

As I have written so many times before, I was a HUGE fan of The Monkees growing up … THEY were the ones who inspired me to play music because it just looked like SO much fun to be hanging with your best friends and doing what you love most.  (Of course, I have since learned otherwise was typically the case within virtually EVERY successful rock act … but hey, I was a kid and I was a dreamer!!!)

 

In the decades since, I have seen virtually every incarnation of the Monkees … Micky, Davy and Peter … Micky and Davy … Micky, Peter and Mike … Micky and Mike … Dolenz, Jones, Boyce and Hart … as well as all four members in solo appearances … but I NEVER had the opportunity to see all four of them performing together on stage at the same time … and with Micky and Mike now officially hanging up The Monkees’ moniker once and for all (and Peter and Davy gone), this will remain one of the great musical regrets of my lifetime.

 

Although I have seen a slight buzz about The Mike and Micky Show continuing on another series of shows aboard a cruise ship (still waiting for official confirmation on that one), the current story goes that the wrap up of this tour will free up both Micky Dolenz and Michael Nesmith to do whatever they feel like doing within the comfort of their own solo careers.  (Sadly, Davy Jones and Peter Tork didn’t make it to the end of the journey … because boy, that sure would have been a sight to see!  What a Farewell Tour THAT would have been!!!)  But it just wasn't meant to be.


Even so, The Monkees’ catalog is so strong and such a big part of my life, it would be virtually impossible for me not to enjoy the gathering of these two music icons … so I had high expectations going into Friday Night’s Show … and I was not disappointed.  (The tour has been playing to rave reviews all over the country … I’ve yet to see a negative posting anywhere … and you’re not going to see one here today from me either!  But I will point out some highs and lows along the way.)

 

The set list that they performed Friday Night was slightly altered from the ones I have seen circulating throughout the internet of late.  Most surprisingly missing was “Circle Sky,” a song performed by The Monkees even WITHOUT Nesmith for decades and a popular concert staple for Monkees fans.  This was especially unexpected since Micky had just covered the tune … in a completely revamped Indian style … for his recent “Dolenz Sings Nesmith” album.  Also gone were “St. Matthew,” “Me and Magdalena” (a popular track and highlight from their recent “Good Times” comeback album) and “What Am I Doing Hanging ‘Round,” long a favorite of mine, written by Michael Martin Murphy.  Instead of coming back out on stage to do a full-blown encore, they also incorporated “Listen To The Band” and “I’m A Believer” right into the set list to close the show, leaving the stage as the lights came on in the theater, indicating that there would be no more … this truly WAS the end of the show.

 

As such, the run-down of the show that WE saw Friday night was as follows:

 

SET ONE:

Good Clean Fun

Last Train To Clarksville

The Kind Of Girl I Could Love

Different Drum

Sunny Girlfriend

Mary, Mary

You Just May Be The One

For Pete's Sake

The Door Into Summer

Randy Scouse Git

Love Is Only Sleeping

Birth of An Accidental Hipster

As We Go Along

Pleasant Valley Sunday

INTERMISSION

SET TWO

Porpoise Song

While I Cry

Papa Gene's Blues

The Girl I Knew Somewhere

A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You

Tapioca Tundra

Auntie's Municipal Court

Goin' Down (with band intros)

Sweet Young Thing

(I’m Not You) Steppin' Stone

Daydream Believer

Listen To The Band

I'm A Believer

All of the dropped songs mentioned above were tunes that would have featured Mike on lead vocals … so let’s start there.

 

Michael looked very thin and frail when the band first took the stage, yet he stood to sing all of his designated tunes … already an improvement from some of the earlier shows where he reportedly sat in a chair to sing all night. (The chair was there Friday night … and he did sit down from time to time if Micky was handling a lead or during an extended instrumental break … but more often than not, he left the stage entirely to give Micky his showcase, which kind of surprised me in that all this walking on and off the stage had to be causing him to exert himself much more than simply “sitting this one out.”)

 

Then again, maybe this is his way of “getting in his steps” … all part of his recovery after suffering a heart attack a couple of years ago.  Perhaps he wasn’t feeling well enough to perform these extra songs as part of a full set.  There were moments when he seemed to be suffering up there a little bit, although ALWAYS conveying good spirit to the audience.  Mike clowned around (and even danced ... if you could call that dancing!!!), talked and told humorous stories throughout the evening, apparently remembering much more of the good times during his tenure with The Pre-Fab Four than the bad, which hasn't always been the case.  (I cannot help but wonder why NOW … at this stage of his life, health and performing abilities, he would choose to return to doing concerts, not to mention the grueling pace of all the traveling and hotels, etc.  Michael was always the one who didn’t want any part of that during all of the previous reunion tours and albums … although all four Monkees were present for the recording of their “Just Us” album in 1996.)


Then again, consider this ... 


After having major heart surgery ... and seeing your tour postponed and rescheduled a couple of times due to Covid ... MOST artists may have taken this as a sign that it was time to finally hang things up ... why go out there and expose yourself to all that can hurt you.


But Mike didn't take that route ... he chose instead to keep playing the music ... and the truth is, he genuinely seems to be enjoying himself … and let’s face it, the bulk of the show is spent showcasing his tunes, many of which have stood the test of time and are still so familiar to those of us who grew up during The Monkees era … which is to say, virtually EVERYBODY, because each new generation to come along since has also enjoyed and experienced these songs as part of the never-ending legacy of The Monkees’ television series that is STILL airing some 55 years later.  As such, The Monkees have become frozen in time … which, to paraphrase Me-TV-FM’s slogan, pretty much becomes the very definition of Timeless and Memorable Music.)

 

There were moments when Michael sang that he sounded exactly like those old recordings from over half a century ago … but most of the time, he kind of half-talked, half-sang those lyrics and, quite annoyingly, nearly always sang them half a step behind the melody, as if he was trying to stretch everything out a bit more for the sake of some type of dramatic performance effect.  The melodies are strong … there is no reason to mess with them.

 

Micky Dolenz, on the other hand, was in fine voice (as always) and also appeared to be having a good time up there reconnecting with the past … which, as Michael so eloquently pointed out, includes ALL of our pasts, as we went thru this whole thing together ... and are forever intertwined.

 

To address a topic that’s become quite popular here lately, Dolenz retains all of the strength, sound and texture of his original vocals … he may have lost a little on the high end (and shied away from even trying to hit some of those high notes he did way back when … and even as recently as a decade ago), but overall his voice is everything it used to be … and he was in complete control of it.  Listen to Micky singing virtually ANY song in Friday Night’s set and compare it to Paul McCartney singing virtually any song in HIS current set and you’ll see exactly what I mean.

 

The crackerjack back-up band was stellar … all fine musicians throughout (and Micky’s sister Coco helped carry some of those high notes alluded to earlier in the way of background vocals.  Her vocal contributions to the band also date back to the very beginning.)

 

One particular highlight of the show for me included the introduction to “Different Drum,” another song Dolenz has covered and reinvented for his “Dolenz Sings Nesmith” album.

 

When Michael first presented the songs to the producers of the television show for consideration, he was told, “No, that’s not a Monkees song” to which Nez replied, “Now wait a minute … I’m a Monkee … and I wrote that song … so how can it not be a Monkees song?”  Because Screen Gems had already contracted some of the best songwriters in the business (Carole King and Gerry Goffin, Neil Diamond, Neil Sedaka, Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, David Gates, et al), they had a very definite, marketable sound in mind for the group … and for the most part they were proven right, time and time again.  Music Director Don Kirshner had the final say on this material and his ears were impeccable when it came to hearing a hit.  All things considered, it’s really quite remarkable in hindsight that Nesmith was allowed to submit as many songs as he did that were actually recorded by the group.  (Sadly, this was never played up or given any attention in the television series … instead, Mike had to endure the indignity of fighting a copyright battle for Boyce and Hart’s novelty hit “Gonna Buy Me A Dog,” presented as Mike’s own in one particular episode.  Truth was, he was writing MUCH better songs, much more often, that were making their way to both the records and the television series … but with very little fanfare for Nesmith himself.)

 

After being told his song wasn’t a hit, Michael gave it to a young, unknown female singer who, at the time, was fronting a band called The Stone Poneys … and “Different Drum” became the first of many, many chart hits for Linda Ronstadt.  (Guess it WAS a hit after all!)

 

Some of Michael’s songs presented Friday night just sounded SO good to hear again as they’re not really part of the oldies radar that most radio stations follow.  This was especially true during his songs “Good Clean Fun” (a minor hit and the show opener, which included the prophetic line “I told you I’d be back and here I am”), “Mary, Mary” (always a favorite, and sung by Micky), “You Just May Be The One,” “Papa Gene’s Blues” (which drew a loud applause from the audience when Mike said, “Play, magic fingers” at the instrumental break, just like he did on the original recording back in 1966) and the Shoulda-Been-A-Top-Ten-Hit Monkees classic “Listen To The Band.”  Tributes were done to Davy and Peter along the way and a group sing-along to “Daydream Believer” was quite moving.

 

All-in-all, a very enjoyable evening of some very enjoyable, fun, feel-good music.  The Monkees may have been created to cash-in on the times … turning the antics of The Beatles’ “A Hard Day’s Night” into a weekly television series was the original concept for the show … but they have proven to be SO much more than that over the years.  You cannot help but get wrapped up in this music … whether you’re hearing it again for the 2000th time … or discovering it for the very first.  (On the way into the theater, I heard a young girl … maybe 8 or 9 years old … telling her father that she couldn’t believe that her teacher didn’t know who The Monkees were when she told the class that she was going to see them that night.  “How can that be, daddy?  I mean, even if she didn’t know all of the songs, she MUST know some of them, right???”

 

Now that’s a kid who was brought up right!  (kk)




PHOTOS: PAUL UNDERSINGER
(submitted by David Salidor)



JUST ANOTHER MAIC MONDAY:


Arrrg!  


Time to Face Another Monday again!

 

Or . . . maybe not . . . !

 

CB ( which stands for "CrackofDawn Boy!" - He said Never! )


Yep! 
I pretty much used up all my Daylight Saving Time Bonus Hour when I reset all the clocks in my house back one hour or trying to figure out HOW to reset some of my clocks back one hour! 
CB!