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The Monkees

Here We Come, Walkin’ down the street…

September 12, 2017

Crazy Monkees

The argument could be made that this group – a made for TV boy band – was like the Rodney Dangerfield of rock and roll: “I don’t get no respect.”

And now, 51 years after their TV program debuted, one could also argue that perhaps there was a bit more to them then the critics said at the time.

I’m talking, of course, about the Monkees. The TV show premiered on September 12, 1966 and, in combination with the release of their first single “Last Train To Clarksville” was an immediate hit with girls of a certain age. That age would have been from about 8 to 14 years old.

mickeydolenz1davy-jonesBut back to the critics and how the group came to be. The idea was to put together an American based band of four guys in an attempt to capitalize on, and compete with, the success of the Beatles. The four (pictured here clockwise starting top left  – Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork, and Michael Nesmith – were all musicians and actors. All took themselves seriously in their pursuit of a career.  At the time Jones was a somewhat successful actor having played the role of the Artful Dodger in the musical “Oliver” and with his British accent and good looks was already cast for the TV show.  An ad was run in the Hollywood Reporter for the rest of the band.

7a3e8466382e345cbf067b5d71d5a7d7According to the infallible Wikipedia:

Madness!! Auditions. Folk & Roll Musicians-Singers for acting roles in new TV series. Running Parts for 4 insane boys, age 17-21. Want spirited Ben Frank’s types. Have courage to work. Must come down for interview.Peter-Tork-the-monkees-18810100-640-480

Out of 437 applicants, the other three chosen for the cast of the TV show were Michael Nesmith, Peter Tork and Micky Dolenz. Nesmith had been working as a musician since early 1963 and had been recording and releasing music under various names, including Michael Blessing and ‘Mike & John & Bill’ and had studied drama in college. Of the final four, Nesmith was the only one who actually saw the ad in Daily Variety and The Hollywood Reporter. Tork, the last to be chosen, had been working the Greenwich Village scene as a musician, and had shared the stage with Pete Seeger; he learned of The Monkees from Stephen Stills, whom Rafelson and Schneider had rejected as a songwriter. Dolenz was an actor (his father was veteran character actor George Dolenz) who had starred in the TV series Circus Boy as a child, using the stage name Mickey Braddock, and he had also played guitar and sung in a band called the Missing Links before the Monkees, which had recorded and released a very minor single, ‘Don’t Do It’. By that time he was using his real name; he found out about The Monkees through his agent.”

No doubt the four must have felt as though they hit the jackpot. Their success was almost immediate as their music resonated with the pre-teen group especially, catapulting them to the top of the music charts. As it turned out it was their music – and not the zany TV show – which proved to be the foundation for their success.

The entire Wikipedia article is worth a read if for no other reason than to gain a better understanding of the almost unbelievable story of the Monkees and their quest to be taken seriously: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Monkees

Monkeemania gripped me when, as a pre-pubescent 9 year old in the fall of 1966, all my friends were enthralled by the group. My mother, however, was appalled and banned my sister and me from watching it. But that didn’t stop us. Somehow we managed to show up at our neighbor Diane’s house at 7:30 p.m. on the appropriate week night to watch the contraband program.

Our little neighborhood group was so gripped by Monkees fever that we even pretended to BE the group. Diane – our ring leader – got to be Davy Jones; my sister, Susan, wore a stocking cap and assumed the role of Michael Nesmith; our year younger neighbor, Andi, was Micky Dolenz; and, me, because of my straight blonde hair, was assigned the role of Peter Tork. I was not thrilled with that assignment as, like most of the girls, Davy was THE one we thought was the best. But then again I did get to be a member of the band!

Although the TV show only ran for two seasons, the Monkees music still resonates today. I think you could argue that it was Nesmith who seized the opportunity to make the band more than a silly sitcom. He pushed and fought for legitimacy his entire career. And although there are still naysayers it’s hard to argue with the band’s success:

  • First music artist to win two Emmy Awards.
  • Had seven albums on the Billboard top 200 chart at the same time (six were re-issues during 1986-1987).
  • One of the first artists achieving number-one hits in the United States and United Kingdom simultaneously.
  • The only recording act to have four No. 1 albums in a 12-month span.
  • Held the No. 1 spot on the Billboard album chart for 31 consecutive weeks, 37 weeks total.
  • Held the record for the longest stay at No. 1 for a debut record album until 1982 when Men at Work‘s debut record album Business As Usual broke that record.
  • Received their star on the Hollywood Walk of fame in July 1989. All 4 members were present for the ceremony.
  • In 2008, the Monkees were inducted into the Hit Parade Hall of Fame.
  • In 2014 the Monkees were inducted into America’s Pop Music Hall of Fame.
  • The Music Business Association (Music Biz)honored the Monkees with an Outstanding Achievement Award celebrating their 50th anniversary on May 16, 2016.

8d979e4ef5da6cd6f1e6e6044c01001eThe boy bands of today have nothing on the Monkees.

Michael Jackson

August 29, 2017

Man In The Mirror

The 1980’s were, in my opinion, one of the best and more diverse decades musically due to the gigantic influence of one artist in particular. That artist was, of course, Michael Jackson.

Were he still alive he would be celebrating his 59th birthday as he was born August 29, 1958.

michael-jackson-thriller1.jpg

His talent was apparent from a very young age as he was part of the Jackson 5 beginning in 1964 at the ripe old age of 6. The group performed for local gigs in their hometown of Gary, Indiana, and also on talent shows. It was in August 1967 that they caught the attention of Gladys Knight upon winning a talent contest at Harlem’s Apollo theatre.  Although her contacts in Motown did not sign the group at that time they persevered as their father Joe Jackson –  the ultimate stage parent –  continued to find and book gigs for them to play. In 1969 they became the opening act for the Supremes and, with the mentoring of Diana Ross, were rocketed into fame.

jackson 5 poster.jpgAlthough the group had tremendous success, no doubt Michael eclipsed his 9 siblings when his solo career started in 1971. His first single “Got To Be There” reached the number four spot on the Billboard Hot 100. It was his next single “Ben” which sent him to the top of the charts.

It was the release of the album “Thriller” in 1982 which made Michael Jackson a true household name. From the Infallible Wikipedia:

“More success came with Jackson’s sixth album, Thriller, released in late 1982. The album earned Jackson seven more Grammys and eight American Music Awards, including the Award of Merit, the youngest artist to win it.  It was the best-selling album worldwide in 1983, and became the best-selling album of all time in the United States and the best-selling album of all time worldwide, selling an estimated 65 million copies.  It topped the Billboard 200 chart for 37 weeks and was in the top 10 of the 200 for 80 consecutive weeks. It was the first album to have seven Billboard Hot 100 top 10 singles, including “Billie Jean”, “Beat It”, and “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin'”.  In December 2015, Thriller was certified for 30 million shipments by the RIAA, making it the only album to achieve that feat in the United States. Thriller won Jackson and Quincy Jones the Grammy award for Producer of the Year (Non-Classical) for 1983. It also won Album of the Year, with Jackson as the album’s artist and Jones as its co-producer, and a Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male, award for Jackson.”

As a performer he brought energy to all he did. It’s fun to go watch the videos he made but I particularly like this clip where he does the moonwalk in a performance for the first time. Enjoy!

On May 8, 1983, the fourth single from the Thriller album was released: Gotta Be Startin’ Somethin’. When I first heard this song it was in the middle of my two year stint with a fledgling start-up software company named Microsoft (I was employee #248 if I remember correctly). Those were heady days for the company. Bill Gate’s star was clearly on the rise and at the end of 1983 he was featured as one of People Magazine’s 25 most intriguing people. But it was at the 4:44 mark in this song which proved to me that Microsoft was on everybody’s, including Michael Jackson’s, mind in 1983. To this day when I hear this song I swear he’s repeating the word ‘Microsoft’ over and over. One of these times I will share the story of Bill Gates and the VW bus.

As often happens, the achievement of fame did not lead to happiness. Jackson was a near daily subject of tabloids and a constant target for paparazzi; his bizarre behaviors and personal life was dissected without abatement.

It was, ultimately, determined that the cause of his death was cardiac arrest. Like everything else in his life, though, that too swirled in controversy. What we do know is that he was taking a virtual pharmacy of drugs for various issues at the time of his death on June 25, 2009.

The whole article is worth a read. His was an amazing life, surreal in many ways.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jackson

The Beatles

The cover of Can’t Buy Me Love

Can’t Buy Me Love

April 4, 2023*

Tune in to any radio station playing oldies and you are certain to hear a song from this one group. Who is it? By now you should all be shouting: The Beatles.

It was on April 4, 1964 that the Beatles accomplished something which no musical group or person either before or after has ever matched.

Imagine Casey Kasem’s voice as you countdown to number one:

  • Falling out of the number two spot to number five this week is “Please, Please Me” by the Beatles!
  • Our next song spent five weeks at number one and is probably this group’s most popular song ever. At number four it’s the Beatles with “I Want To Hold Your Hand.”
  • Relinquishing its spot at number one, this song drops two spots to number three. It’s the Beatles with “She Loves You.”
  • The lead vocalist of our next song was suffering from a cold the day this Isley Brother’s cover was recorded. The song was laid down in just one take and the effects of the cold contribute to the rock and roll sound. Coming in at number two is “Twist and Shout” by the Beatles.
  • Catapulting to the number one position this week from number 27 is none other than The Beatles with “Can’t Buy Me Love.”

It was an unprecedented event. The top five songs on the Billboard Hot 100 were all by The Beatles. Yes, 1964 was the year of the Beatles as explained in this article from the always Infallible Wikipedia:

“The song (Can’t Buy Me Love) was the third of seven songs by the Beatles to hit #1 in a one-year period; an all-time record. In order, these were ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’, ‘She Loves You’, ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’, ‘Love Me Do’, ‘A Hard Day’s Night’, ‘I Feel Fine’, and ‘Eight Days a Week’. It was also the third of seven songs written by Lennon-McCartney to hit #1 in 1964; that’s an all-time record for writing the most songs to hit #1 in the same calendar year. (see List of Billboard Hot 100 chart achievements and milestones)

Rolling Stone ranked ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’ at No. 295 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The song spent five consecutive weeks at No. 1. The only Beatles songs to exceed that mark were ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ at seven weeks and ‘Hey Jude’ at nine weeks.”

Whether you think their music was genius or formulaic, one thing is certain, they dominated the Billboard Hot 100 charts in the mid-1960’s.

Now I’m positive all of you think I’m going to link to a Beatle’s Song but you’re wrong! The Beatles were such a pop culture sensation that the whole world was abuzz over these four young phenoms from the British Isles. You’ve likely all heard their songs thousands of times but I leave you instead with THIS musical masterpiece which summed up the inter-generational shock-waves they produced.

*UPDATE – This article first ran in 2017. It’s been updated to include the following additional information.

 I admit it. I’m not a big Beatles fan. But thanks to my fellow author, Roger, I have developed an appreciation for just how groundbreaking their music was. If one were to hear it for the first time today you might think it sounds like every song ever produced in the 1960’s. But that wouldn’t be true. What is true is that all THOSE songs came AFTER the Beatles and were the imitations.

Now for a Seattle connection and my ‘six’ degrees of separation to the Beatles. On August 21, 1964 the Beatles stayed at the Edgewater Hotel in Seattle. At the time, almost no one in Seattle wanted anything to do with the headaches that would come with the world’s most famous group and the crowds of teenage girls who swarmed around them… no one except one Don Wright, the man who was the Edgewater’s General Manager.

Many credit is pushing to have the Beatle’s stay at the hotel as the reason why it was not torn down and has, instead, become a Seattle landmark.

Here’s an article from the Seattle Post Intelligencer all about their stay and Mr. Wright’s role:

https://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/Beatles-stay-at-Edgewater-helped-mark-its-place-1305857.php

As far as my connection, in addition to working at the Edgewater, Mr. Wright was also associated with the Order of DeMolay, a youth group for young men. In the 1970’s he was the Executive Director for the group. It was in 1974 when I participated in their ‘Sweetheart’ program and met Don Wright. At the time I had no idea of his connection to the Beatles. So my Bacon Number (https://barbaradevore.com/2018/09/04/the-oracle-of-bacon/) to the Beatles is an impressive ‘two.’

As my faithful readers already know, I save historical documents. These are two of the pages from my 1974 DeMolay Conclave program.

My deepest regards to Don’s youngest daughter who posted about this famous event on her Facebook page a couple years ago. What a treasure these memories are for her and her family! This one’s dedicated to you KWP.

Jim Croce

Photographs and Memories

January 10, 2018

There are a handful of musical artists whose star flames brightly for a very short time before they are extinguished.

croce-13tflt2One such artist was Jim Croce.  Born on January 10, 1943, Croce wrote some two dozen songs which resonated with my generation: Time In a Bottle, I Have To Say I Love You in A Song, and I’ve got A Name are but three of the ballads he immortalized which spring immediately to mind.

Croce’s life path was not an easy one. No doubt he was driven to write his music despite gaining little traction with it until 1972 when his songs started to get airtime on commercial radio. His most successful single Bad, Bad Leroy Brown reached Number 1 on the Billboard Charts in July 1973. With that success came a series of appearances and, from all indications, he was on a trajectory to stardom.

From the infallible Wikipedia:

“Croce then began appearing on television, including his national debut on American Bandstand on August 12, 1972, The Tonight Show on August 14, 1972, The Dick Cavett Show on September 20/21 1972, The Helen Reddy Show airing July 19, 1973 and the newly launched The Midnight Special, which he co-hosted airing June 15. From July 16 through August 4, 1973, Croce and (Maury) Muehleisen returned to London and performed on The Old Grey Whistle Test where they sang ‘Lover’s Cross’ and ‘Workin’ at the Car Wash Blues’ from their upcoming album ‘I Got a Name’.”

Croce familyDespite the success he had grown increasingly homesick and wanted to return to San Diego to be with his wife, Ingrid, and their infant son. He wrote a letter to her telling her of his plans to pursue a career as a screen writer rather than a songwriter/musician. She would not receive that letter until after his death.

The plane in which he and his band were traveling crashed on takeoff:

“On Thursday, September 20, 1973, during Croce’s Life and Times tour and the day before his ABC single ‘I Got a Name’ was released, Croce and five others died when their chartered Beechcraft E18S crashed into a tree during take-off from the Natchitoches Regional Airport in Natchitoches, Louisiana. Others killed in the crash were pilot Robert N. Elliott, musician Maury Muehleisen, comedian George Stevens, manager and booking agent Kenneth D. Cortose, and road manager Dennis Rast. Croce had just completed a concert at Northwestern State University’s Prather Coliseum in Natchitoches and was flying to Sherman, Texas, for a concert at Austin College. The plane crashed an hour after the concert. Croce was 30 years old.”

croce and muelheisin

One of the things which made Croce unique was that he was truly a storyteller. Each of his songs evoke powerful images of a particular event, person or place. I have often wondered if, had he not died, would he have been able to give up music? I like to think he would have realized his amazing gift and would have continued to write songs for a generation.

Instead, I will have to be satisfied with the songs he left behind. Whenever I drive solo someplace (usually across Snoqualmie Pass to Yakima) I have with me a shoebox full of CD’s. It contains two dozen of my favorite artists and also my next favorite artists. Jim Croce is part of the first group.

When I made the trek yesterday his music was one of the three artists I chose for my travels. In fact, it’s a rare trip when I don’t find myself seeking out at least a few Jim Croce songs.

It’s pretty impossible to pick my favorite of his… so I won’t. But I will share this performance of his.

And as always a link to more information on Wikipedia:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Croce

Apparently I like Jim Croce so much that I published the article you just read a year after I also wrote the article below! I’ve left both up as I like both. How to choose between the two?

I’ve Got A Name

January 10, 2017

Welcome to my Blog. Tuesday’s are Writer’s Group day and a couple of years ago I took over as the communications czar for the group. Soon, however, I tired of the boring ‘meeting tomorrow’ sorts of emails and started sending out what I hoped were more interesting reminders.

Each week I scour the internet in search of something that tickles my fancy and piques my interest. Here you might discover some interesting historical event, a cultural connection, a biography for a writer (books, songs, poetry), or some random Geeky musing.

*It seems as if January 10th is the birth date for a whole slew of musical types including Jim CroceFrank Sinatra, Jr., Rod Stewart and Don Fagen (Steely Dan). But when I saw one particular name I decided to write about him. That would be Jim Croce who was born on this date in 1943. Jim Croce is on my top 10 list – maybe even my top five – of favorite musicians.

Like most of my favorites he was, first and foremost, a story teller. His songs run the gamut from humorous to quite introspective. They effectively capture time and place with their vivid imagery and effective metaphors and similes. A master songwriter can distill the human experience down to three minutes and leave all of us wishing for more. Croce did that in his songs.

Tragically, his life ended at age 30 when the private plane he and four others were in, crashed on takeoff in Natchitoches, Louisiana. In a letter to his wife – which she received after his death – he told her he had “decided to quit music and stick to writing short stories and movie scripts as a career, and withdraw from public life.”

I have always wondered if he really would have been able to walk away from the songwriting, though. Of course we will never know which is the real tragedy.

You can visit the Jim Croce website for more information: http://jimcroce.com/ and there’s always the infallible Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Croce

And, you can listen to the Song referenced in the subject line, I’ve Got A Name, here: