Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Mike Nesmith of the Monkees

 (From my book, Rock 'n' Blues Stew)

Mike Nesmith:

  From the Monkees to a millionaire, you can’t argue with a man in a wool hat

 

A music journalist has to be careful when accepting an offer to write an essay about his or her favored musician of choice.  In my case, I was caught by my own trap (the term is “hoisted by one’s own petard”), and I think it was used on an early Star Trek episode with Captain Kirk.  What simply happened to me is that a blogger buddy from Minnesota named WhiteRay threw the idea back in my lap and asked, “What makes Michael Nesmith more interesting than any of the other country-folk-rock musicians from the same time period in his genre?”  It took a few days to let it simmer until I found an answer—or several.

For one, he yodels.

No, not the rolled pastry; the way he sings, of course.  He yodels—and that clued me in to some of the Nez magic.  It’s his way of carrying along the legacy and tradition of those singers who incorporated that method into their work in the country vein of musical bloodlines.  Jimmy “the Singing Brakeman” Rodgers, for one—and absolutely, there’s a big hunk of Hank Williams, too.  They would surely be included—it’s part of Nesmith’s heritage as a native son of the Republic of Texas; it’s that mix of refined/respectable gentleman and hell-raisin’ rascal.

But it’s also a mix and blend of Nashville, but it comes through other locations and fellow musicians. It goes as far as the Pacific Northwest region where Danny O’Keefe comes from (listen to “I’m Sober Now”)—and then you can count in Boz Scaggs down at the Muscle Shoals studio in 1969, working on “Waiting for a Train.”  Nez, however, makes it a staple part of his production—and it just fits naturally, as though he knew he was born to yippee and whoop.  And no, I already know how much influence folks like Gram Parsons, the Flying Burrito Brothers, and Pure Prairie League had—I mean it’s different when Nesmith plays because it’s like he was singing about himself and not some distant ideal or goal like a busted romance and how to fix it.

 If you really want to hear how far back he made it clear, turn it back to the Monkees’s first album and slip on “Papa Gene’s Blues.”  That James Burton-like Nashville lead guitar is, I think, where Mike’s heart has been right from the start.  Follow that with “Sunny Girlfriend” from the Headquarters release, and you’ve got the next clue.  Forget all that foolishness that was part of the group’s act: Michael Nesmith was always a serious musician who honored his country roots.  And backing that up is the whine of a pedal steel guitar—it’s found on almost all his songs (“Mama Nantucket” is a great example—and not the kind of title I’d associate with the instrument).

That’s another part of the man’s appeal: he had a businessman’s approach to writing songs and lyrics in an honest but earnest way that lacks any fancy gimmicks.  It was his approach to acting as well; for what it matters, there was no other option with the clowning antics that made the other three Monkees seem so cute.  Even the Beatles needed George Harrison to be considered serious at times.  Nez, on his part, keeps his production basic and focused—but adds just a tad of mischief.  My favorite tune is “Rio,” partially because he deliberately rearranges words and images to create a fantasy of escaping to South America for the adventure of it—and the way he plays on the title itself when a woman’s voice proclaims, “Not Reno, dummy! Rio! Rio de JIN-ero!” 

See? It’s not an obvious thing; it’s more simple than all the elaborate parts.  He sings and plays like a musical collection of old movie stars: he’s sort of a singing mix of the best characteristics of Cary Grant and Gary Cooper: polite, firm, and funny, and quiet when it counts.  That is, quiet until he writes a song—and then he’s out for a good laugh and a good time on the town.

  Heck, maybe it’s that Mike Nesmith is and always has been a man who knew what he wanted and how to do it—and he lets the music do his walking and talking.  Or maybe it’s just that confidence that comes from—can I say—“a home on the range”?  Any way I try to pin it down, it just comes down to a man who knew what he could do and how to make it fit his needs and his music as well as his life story.

  Can’t argue that with a man in a wool hat and a millionaire to boot.


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Mike Nesmith of the Monkees

 (From my book, Rock 'n' Blues Stew) Mike Nesmith:   From the Monkees to a millionaire, you can’t argue with a man in a wool hat   A...