More of the Monkees Monkees

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CD

  • Release Date: 01/13/2008
  • Original Release: 1967
  • Sales Rank: 16,650
  • Label: ATLANTIC UK
  • UPC: 745099765828
More Formats 
CD - Special Edition$21.59
Vinyl LP$18.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

More of the Monkees

1LISTENShe 2:40
2LISTENWhen Love Comes Knockin' (At Your Door) 1:49
3LISTENMary, Mary 2:16
4LISTENHold on Girl 2:29
5LISTENYour Auntie Grizelda 2:30
6LISTEN(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone 2:25
7LISTENLook out (Here Comes Tomorrow) 2:16
8LISTENThe Kind of Girl I Could Love 1:53
9LISTENThe Day We Fall in Love 2:26
10LISTENSometime in the Morning 2:30
11LISTENLaugh 2:30
12LISTENI'm a Believer 2:50
13LISTENDon't Listen to Linda previously unreleased / Bonus Track 2:28
14LISTENI'll Spend My Life With You previously unreleased / Bonus Track / Alternate Version 2:30
15LISTENI Don't Think You Know Me previously unreleased / Bonus Track 2:19
16LISTENLook Out (Here Comes Tomorrow) Alternate Version 2:53
17LISTENI'm a Believer Alternate Version 2:52

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Monkees second album More of the Monkees lived up to its title. It was more successful commercially, spending an amazing 70 weeks on the Billboard charts and ultimately becoming the 12th biggest selling album of all time. It had more producers and writers involved since big-shots like Carole King and Gerry Goffin, Jeff Barry and Neil Sedaka, as well as up-and-comers like Neil Diamond all grabbed for a piece of the pie after Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, the men who made the debut album such a smash, were elbowed out by music supervisor Don Kirshner. The album also has more fantastic songs than the debut. Tracks like "I'm a Believer," "She," "Mary, Mary," " (I'm Not Your) Stepping Stone," "Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow)," "Your Auntie Grizelda," and "Sometime in the Morning" are on just about every Monkees hits collection and, apart from the novelty "Grizelda," they are among the best pop/rock heard in the '60s or any decade since. The band themselves still had relatively little involvement in the recording process, apart from providing the vocals along with Mike Nesmith's writing and producing of two tracks (the hair-raising rocker "Mary, Mary" and the folk-rock gem "The Kind of Girl I Could Love"). In fact, they were on tour when the album was released and had to go to the record shop and buy copies for themselves. As with the first album though, it really doesn't matter who was involved when the finished product is this great. Listen to Micky Dolenz and the studio musicians rip through "Stepping Stone" or smolder through "She," listen to the powerful grooves of "Mary, Mary" or the heartfelt playing and singing on "Sometime in the Morning" and dare to say the Monkees weren't a real band. They were! The tracks on More of the Monkees (with the exception of the aforementioned "Your Auntie Grizelda " and the sickly sweet "The Day We Fell in Love," which regrettably introduces the smarmy side of Davy Jones) stand up to the work of any other pop band operating in 1967. Real or fabricated, the Monkees rate with any pop band of their era and More of the Monkees solidifies that position. Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

A manufactured image? Who cares?by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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July 01, 2000: Here are the Monkees during their rapidly rising popularity in the '60s, so you know it has to be good. It is: two songs were hits ('I'm a Believer,' 'Steppin' Stone'), virtually all songs were written by some of the best songwriters of the time (Boyce & Hart, Neil Diamond, Carole King, etc.), and I even heard an obscure one on a background music system nearly a decade later ('When Love Comes Knockin''). The Monkees have been lambasted for being so commercial, but if it's great music written by the best songwriters and performed by great vocalists (the Monkees themselves), who cares? Some of the non-hit songs here that are especially good are 'Mary Mary,' 'Look Out,' 'Sometime in the Morning,' 'She.' One amusing quirk: 'Hold On Girl' has the drum roll badly out of rhythm!

This review was written about the CD edition.