2021-12-10

MICHAEL NESMITH - 'AT-A BOY, MIKE...

 

I was 3 years old when The Monkees TV show debuted on NBC in September of 1966. I probably wasn’t watching TV that night and most likely don’t remember the show from its initial run, but when it went into syndication and became a Saturday morning staple of the late 1960s and early 1970s, it became essential viewing for this kid. I never missed the show for as long as it held that slot along with Batman and Star Trek. Those were my “holy trinity” of childhood TV and I’m sure there’s something in that to explain why I became the fucked up adult that I am now.

Hearing about Michael Nesmith passing today, the third member of the group to leave the material realm, is somehow unreal in some ways. It has been said that certain aboriginal peoples believe that photography steals your soul, so I can only imagine what being on a hit TV show that’s been in syndication for five decades does to it. Somewhere in my psyche, they’re still all in their early 20s, romping around their LA beach house under the watchful gaze of Mr. Schneider, the stoic mannequin who occasionally offered up sage advice. They’ve become immortal in that sense, their images and antics forever cycling in the minds of successions of generations who keep rediscovering their magic.

Mike was an exceptional component of what turned out to be an extraordinary cast. Four guys who were brought together in order to cash-in on the popularity of a British group of mop-tops while simultaneously offering the show’s producers a chance to subvert primetime TV with some Beat generation counter-culture. Co-creator, Bob Rafelson, was a hip dude who was turned on to the underground and wanted to inject those influences into the mainstream and he succeeded by hiring four similarly hip kids to be his proxies. But he and his co-conspirator, industry insider Bert Schneider, also played Frankenstein and cobbled together a monster when they hired those boys to play the parts of a struggling rock band who could never catch a break. In the case of The Monkees, the errant brain that caused the monster to develop a mind of its own, or as Micky would put it, “turned Pinocchio into a real boy”, was Nesmith.

He was a true artist and bristled at the idea of being nothing more than a tool and a puppet for his masters. He fought tooth-and-nail to get the band control over their music, both as writers and performers. It was a well placed fist through a wall next to a network executive’s head that was the catalyst that got music director Don Kirshner fired and put the boys in the driver’s seat. After that, Mike was responsible for contributing some of the most memorable of their original songs. Even if their record sales never again reached the peak that Kirshner’s productions achieved, what they may have missed commercially, they more than made up for in terms of artistic integrity.

After leaving the band to go solo, Mike spent the better part of the ‘70s pioneering the genre of country rock, a thankless, unrecognized contribution that was lost behind the backlash of post-Monkees infamy, where they were individually dismissed as has-beens. While I recall songs like Joanne and Silver Moon from my mom’s stack of 45s as a kid, it wasn’t until the early 2000s that I started to collect his solo albums and discovered how truly magnificent they are. It’s a stunning catalogue of sophisticated, thoughtful and fully original music that remains utterly timeless. But Mike was just getting started and his next move would light the match that would change the music industry, for better or worse, for the rest of the 20th century and beyond.

In 1978, he made a promotional video for his song, Rio, not even really comprehending that all the label wanted from him was a clip of him singing the song. His mind went somewhere else entirely and he came up with the idea of making a little “movie” of the song with a fully developed narrative thread and structure, complete with sets and extras and props. Oddly enough, this idea hadn’t really been done before. A lot of people give Queen credit for “inventing” the music video with their promo for Bohemian Rhapsody, but it was Nesmith who truly hit on the structure which would become the modern music video. Shortly after producing this clip, he created the first full video album, Elephant Parts, and started to develop the idea of a TV program that was composed entirely of little music stories. This lead to the idea of putting to use a failed shopping channel satellite feed and, BAM!, MTV was born!

But Mike didn’t want to run a music TV channel, so he sold the rights to it and, with additional funding from his inheritance after his mother, the inventor of liquid paper, had passed, he formed Pacific Arts, a film production company. He then began to work on producing films, eventually succeeding in helping to create cult favorites like Tape Heads and Repo Man. He’d spend most of the ‘80s focused on this phase of his career and wouldn’t return to music until 1992 when he released his critically acclaimed Tropical Campfires album. Since then, he’s been a pioneer in the realm of internet VR tech, starting one of the first portals for subscribers to experience interactive virtual concerts and performances.

For a long time, people assumed he kept his distance from The Monkees out of some sense of shame, but the truth was simply that he was too wrapped up in other business to be able to participate in reunions with the group, though he did make a guest appearance for a show in LA in 1986 following the group’s revival after a marathon of their series aired on MTV. It’s somehow fitting that the channel he birthed would become instrumental in giving the group new life for a new generation 20 years after their debut. Ten years later, he was instrumental in spearheading a return to the studio by all four members for the recording of a brand new album, 1996’s Justus, where the band returned to their Headquarters roots and did it all themselves, even more so than in their early days. Flawed as that album may have been, it at least showed that he wasn’t averse to stepping back into the fray again and he even produced a TV special to coincide with the album’s release.

After the death of Davy Jones, the first member of the band to pass in 2012, Mike started intermittently touring with the group in the ensuing years, at least when he wasn’t busy performing solo concerts or working on his memoir, Infinite Tuesday, a book that’s well work checking out if you want a marvelous insight into his amazing and complex life. After Peter Tork passed in 2019, Mike & Micky set about putting together what would become their farewell tour. I was actually going to see them when they came to Vancouver, but that show was scheduled for March of 2020, right when the first wave of the pandemic shut the world down. The show was then postponed twice before being cancelled, though US dates were eventually pulled off this year and their final show in LA happened only a couple of weeks ago. I was heartbroken when I knew I wouldn’t get to see them on this tour because I had a sense that this was it and the last chance I’d get to see him live. I did get to see Micky and Peter when they came to Vancouver’s PNE on their 50th anniversary tour in support of their magnificent Good Times album in 2016, but Mike wasn't on that tour, except for the LA gig.

Michael Nesmith was a true artist, from the tips of his toes to the top of the ball on that wool hat he made famous 55 years ago. He may have started out as merely a character on a TV show about a made-up band, but the sheer strength of his creativity and character almost singlehandedly transformed it into a credible creative force, one which ultimately produced some of the most memorable and timeless pop music of the 20th century. Without him, all we’d have had was some sticky sweet bubblegum that would have lost its taste after a few chews and ended up in a forgotten wad under the desk of history. Instead, he helped ensure The Monkees left behind a sprawling landscape of incredibly well crafted musical gems and then he went and did the same with his solo career. He leaves behind a magnificent legacy and an indelible impact on the cultural landscape in ways that are both profound and sublime.