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Michael Nesmith of The Monkees dies at 78

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tmc...@gmail.com

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Dec 11, 2021, 11:58:58 AM12/11/21
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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/10/arts/music/michael-nesmith-dead.html

Nesmith, who died this morning of natural causes, shot to fame in the made-
for-TV rock group, known as the Monkee in the green wool hat with the thick
Texas drawl. Nesmith, whose The Monkees TV series aired on NBC from 1966 to
1968, was "a struggling 23-year-old singer and songwriter when he saw an
advertisement in Variety seeking '4 insane boys' for “acting roles in new TV
series," Neil Genzlinger writes in Nesmith's New York Times obituary. "Two
aspiring television producers, Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider, inspired by
the Beatles’ movies, were hoping to make a TV series about the zany antics of
a rock band — not a real rock band (although the Lovin’ Spoonful was briefly
considered for the job), but actors with musical backgrounds who could create
the illusion of a band. The four members were picked to fit types. Davy
Jones, a British vocalist, was the cute scamp; Micky Dolenz, the drummer, was
the wild jokester; and Peter Tork, the bass player, was the lovable dim bulb.
Mr. Nesmith, a guitarist, was variously described as the cerebral Monkee, the
introspective Monkee, the sardonic Monkee, the quiet Monkee." Dolenz once
said of Nesmith: "He has that dry Will Rogers sense of humor. That’s probably
one of the reasons they cast him." Nesmith later played a pivotal role in the
creation of MTV. His 1977 song "Rio" is credited with being one of the first
music videos. “They wanted me to stand in front of a microphone and sing,”
Nesmith was quoted as saying in Craig Marks and Rob Tannenbaum's 2011 book I
Want My MTV: The Uncensored Story of the Music Video Revolution. But he did
something different. “I wrote a series of cinematic shots: me on a horse in a
suit of light, me in a tux in front of a 1920s microphone, me in a Palm Beach
suit dancing with a woman in a red dress, women with fruit on their head
flying through the air with me,” he said. "As we edited these images, an
unusual thing started to emerge: The grammar of film, where images drove the
narrative, shifted over to where the song drove the narrative, and it didn’t
make any difference that the images were discontinuous. It was hyper-real.
Even people who didn’t understand film, including me, could see this was a
profound conceptual shift.” In 1979, Nesmith and the director William Dear
launched the Nickelodeon show Popclips, which showed nothing but music videos
introduced by a V.J. The show is said to be one of the inspirations for MTV,
which launched two years later in 1981.

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