Television producers Bert Schneider and Bob Rafelson came up with the idea of casting a rock-and-roll band that could star in its own televison series on NBC. They ran an ad in Variety and selected four young men to serve as members of the band: Michael Nesmith, Peter Tork, Davy Jones, and Micky Dolenz. They produced a pilot and called the group the Monkees. It was Boyce and Hart who did the songs for the pilot in 1966, including the singing. When rock impressario Don Kirschner was brought in to handle the music for the show, he told Boyce and Hart they didn't have a proven track record as producers and they were off the project, except as songwriters. As the show's first air date loomed, one music producer after another was acquired and then rejected for the project, while Tommy Boyce kept telling Kirschner that he and Bobby could handle it. Kirschner finally gave them a chance, Boyce and Hart recorded vocals and backing tracks for the first album, and then the Monkees recorded lead vocals.

- bill 1-01-2006 9:00 pm

"People say we monkey around but we're too busy singing to put anybody down." Makes very little sense when you think about it.

Line stolen from guy in Dallas: "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: the Banana Splits of dystopia."
- tom moody 1-01-2006 9:17 pm [add a comment]


and smurfs are the smurfs of dystopia? you wanna' talk makin sense? three words: do-wah-diddy...


- bill 1-01-2006 9:50 pm [add a comment]





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