BLANK SLATE MEDIA February 14, 2020
YOUR GUIDE TO THE ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT AND DINING
STILL A BELIEVER BY D AV I D HINCKLEY
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mong other things in an eventful life, Micky Dolenz has been a child television star, a producer, a director, a songwriter, a stage actor, a morning radio DJ and a fund-raiser. But when he comes to My Fatherâs Place in Roslyn on Feb. 23, heâll just basically be a Monkee. âIâve always thought you should give the people what they want,â says Dolenz, who locked in his primary identity more than half a century ago when he, Davy Jones, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork became the Monkees. They had a hit TV show for two seasons, and even more memorably they blanketed pop radio with the likes of âLast Train To Clarksville,â âDaydream Believer,â âA Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You,â âPleasant Valley Sundayâ and âIâm A Believer.â Hey, hey, they were the Monkees, and if their legacy is deceptively complicated, Dolenz says their continuing appeal is no mystery. âWe had great songs,â he says. âTheyâre still great songs. Look who wrote them: Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, Gerry GoďŹn and Carole King, Neil Diamond, JeďŹ Barry. And they had great production. âPeople still want to hear them today. So I sing them as close as possible to the way the
PHOTO COURTESY OF MY FATHERâS PLACE
Micky Dolenz records sounded.â Dolenz sang lead on most of the hits, starting with âLast Train to Clarksville,â but thatâs just one reason he likes faithful replications. âIâm a huge music fan, too,â
he says, âand as a fan, thatâs what Iâd want. âGrowing up, I was a huge Everly Brothers fan. They were like my Beatles. I was in London in 1983 when they got back together and were doing their ďŹrst
reunion show at Royal Albert Hall. As my wife and I were ďŹling in, I was saying to myself, oh please, I hope they do âWake Up Little Susieâ and âBye Bye Loveâ and all the songs I loved. âThey did. And I said to myself that if I were ever in that position â this is before the Monkees resurgence of 1986 â I would do that, too.â Since â86, heâs done it with his own show and with everchanging mix-and-match combinations of Monkees. Jones died in 2012 and Tork last year, but starting in April, Dolenz and Nesmith will be doing another Monkees tour out West. âItâs been good to me,â says Dolenz about the Monkee biz. If Dolenz and the Monkees always exuded innocent fun on camera, theyâve had their share of well-publicized diďŹerences oďŹ the stage. They have also woven one of the most complicated legacies in rock ânâ roll. They had a hit TV show and millions of fans. They also had skeptics who said that because they formed at a TV show audition, they were a manufactured band. Because they didnât play instruments on some of their early recordings, they were not authentic rock ânâ rollers. Rock critics have tended to dismiss their music as catchy, but featherweight. Despite selling 80 or a hundred million albums, they have never received serious consideration for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Dolenz says he had a simple response when he heard those dismissals back in the day. âI told them I didnât give a sâ,â he says. âWe were too busy being successful.â These days, heâs diplomatic. âI respect the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,â he says. âTheir foundation does great work. Iâve worked with them to raise money. But theyâre a private club. They can invite who they want.â The real problem, he suggests, is that 53-plus years later,
âA lot of people still donât get the Monkees. âNo one had done a TV show like this before. The year I auditioned for the Monkees, there were at least four ideas out there for TV series about music. The other three felt like they were created by guys in suits saying, âLetâs make a show for the kids.â The Monkees got it. It was like the Marx Brothers. It was a conďŹuence of rock ânâ roll, TV, radio stations. It was a new paradigm.
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â âve always thought you should give the people what they want,â
Micky Dolenz âThe characters we played werenât successful musicians. Thatâs what they wanted to become. This wasnât âHelpâ or âA Hard Dayâs Night.â On the show we never made it â and thatâs one of the main things that endeared us to the audience. All those thousands of kids playing guitars in their garages, we were just like them. âLook at all the shows that came after us. To me, the closest one was Glee, and by then people got it. No one watched Glee and said, âThatâs a fake glee club.â â Whatever the nuances, Dolenz does not sound unhappy. Monkee life had many upsides, such as hanging out with folks like the Beatles. âAfter a while you felt like a peer with a lot of the musicians,â Dolenz says. âBut with the Beatles, I always felt like a fan. Heck, I ran into Paul a couple of years ago and I realized, heck, Iâm still a fan.â Like the folks who will see him in Roslyn. (Micky Dolenz at My Fatherâs Place, 1221 Old Northern Blvd., Roslyn, Feb. 23 at 3 and 7 p.m. 516-413-3535, www.myfathersplace.com. Tix $75.)