Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 12/01/2006
"I Wonder What She's Doing Tonite?" went Top Ten in January of 1968, toward the end of
Monkee-mania, and it's as splendid a
pop tune about lovelorn insecurity as you'll find. The album titled after the hit is a real treat, and is up there with some of the better albums by
the Monkees; the pair's ability to blend American
bubblegum with British
pop makes for a unique confection. You can hear the wonderful sounds that come out of that mixture on
"Goodbye Baby (I Don't Want to See You Cry)" and
"Pretty Flower," which ends with a bizarre kind of
Velvet Underground vocal chatter out of
"The Murder Mystery." "Goodbye Baby"'s ending is straight off
the Rolling Stones'
Their Satanic Majesties Request, while
"Love Every Day" has a melody straight from
Herman's Hermits'
"Listen People." Not content to nick riffs from everyone else, they loop their own
"Last Train to Clarksville" guitar line under
"Teardrop City." "I'm Digging You Digging Me," "Leaving Again," and
"The Countess" are all first-rate
pop, side two flowing better without the filler of the first side's
"Two for the Price of One," the only song they didn't write that seems to be about the duo. Calling
Boyce "the gangster of love" might reference
the Steve Miller Band, but the song comes off as just silly. At four minutes and 44 seconds,
"Population" seems to be their political statement, a minor '60s protest with
Allan Sherman's
"Hello Mudduh, Hello Fadduh!" tucked inside, the song sliding neatly into a beautiful version of
the Monkees' favorite,
"I Wanna Be Free." It's a nice piano/guitar/vocal duet much different from
Davy Jones' popular rendition, and a beautiful ending to an often overlooked set of recordings.
~Joe Viglione, All Music Guide