Good Times! | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | the Monkees |
Cover: | Good Times! (The Monkees) (Front Cover).jpg |
Border: | yes |
Recorded: |
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Studio: |
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Genre: | Pop rock |
Length: | 36:47 |
Label: | Rhino |
Producer: | Adam Schlesinger, The Monkees, Jeff Barry |
Prev Title: | Monkeemania (The Very Best of the Monkees) |
Prev Year: | 2011 |
Next Title: | Christmas Party |
Next Year: | 2018 |
Good Times! is the twelfth studio album by the American pop rock band the Monkees, released in 2016 by Rhino Records. Produced primarily by Adam Schlesinger, the album was recorded to commemorate the band's 50th anniversary. It was the first Monkees studio album since Justus (1996), marking the longest gap between releases to date, and the first since the death of band member Davy Jones. The album features surviving Monkees Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork, as well as a posthumous contribution from Jones.
Good Times! received generally positive reviews from music critics and reached number 14 on the Billboard 200, becoming the band's highest-charting album in 48 years.
The project was initiated by Rhino executives John Hughes and Mark Pinkus, who wanted the Monkees to record a new album for the band's 50th anniversary.[1] The album, the band's first since Justus (1996), was produced by Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne and features surviving Monkees Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork.[2]
The album features one composition or co-write from each Monkee, as well as older material penned by writers long associated with the band (Harry Nilsson, Neil Diamond, Tommy Boyce & Bobby Hart, Gerry Goffin & Carole King and Jeff Barry & Joey Levine), alongside new songs by Schlesinger, Andy Partridge, Rivers Cuomo, Ben Gibbard, Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller.[3] Schlesinger had asked his Fountains of Wayne bandmate Jody Porter to write a song for the album, but it was not used because it was too similar to the title track.[4]
The title track is a composition by Nilsson, first attempted in a session in January 1968, and the album version features new vocals by Dolenz singing a posthumous "duet" with Nilsson,[5] [1] who had performed a guide vocal in the original session.[6] Monkee Davy Jones is represented posthumously by the Diamond-penned track "Love to Love",[1] which was recorded in 1967 in a Don Kirshner-supervised session while the group was trying to gain musical independence from Kirshner.[7] In August 1969, Brendan Cahill supervised a new double-tracked lead vocal by Jones, but the song remained unfinished and did not see an official release until a poor quality copy was issued on the 1979 compilation album Monkeemania.[7] The 1969 version appears on Good Times!, with new backing vocals by Dolenz and Tork.[5]
Dolenz was uncomfortable with some of Cuomo's original lyrics in "She Makes Me Laugh", and Cuomo "added in new lyrics about Scrabble and a canoe trip when Dolenz felt the original draft was geared towards a man much younger than his 71 years."[8] The lyric "directing traffic in the mall" was improvised by Dolenz.[9]
In addition to Monkees band members Dolenz (vocals, drums), Nesmith (vocals, guitar) and Tork (vocals, keyboards, banjo), guest musicians include Fountains of Wayne members Schlesinger (guitar, bass, keyboards, drums, percussion), Porter (guitar) and Brian Young (drums, percussion), as well as Mike Viola (guitar, bass, background vocals).
The first single from the album was the Cuomo-penned "She Makes Me Laugh", released on April 28, 2016, along with a lyric video.[10] The second single was Partridge's composition "You Bring the Summer", released on May 2.[11] The third and final single was Gibbard's "Me & Magdalena", released on May 19.[12] Dolenz and Tork embarked on a 50th anniversary tour to promote the album, including nearly 50 dates in North America.[6]
The Independent gave the album a 4 out of 5 review, declaring that Good Times! was "probably The Monkees' best album, after their hits compilation", while The New York Times summed up the release with "Fifty years later, the Monkees are still endearing." The Herald-Standard concluded that "If indeed this latest album serves as the group's swan song, then it is a joyous finale." Mojo gave the album four stars and declared it their album of the week, while Record Collector stated "to everyone's considerable relief and delight, they've pulled it off. They really have," and gave the album four stars.
The album was awarded 3.5 out of 5 by Rolling Stone, who concluded, "Monkees freaks have waited far too long for this album. But it was worth it." The magazine's Australian edition gave it full marks and noted "Producer Adam Schlesinger of Fountains Of Wayne knows a thing or five about classic pop, and although Good Times! is a Frankenstein's monster of something old, something new and something in between, he manages to orchestrate the whole thing into something beyond an embarrassing heritage act."
Ultimate Classic Rock declared that "The fact that there is a new Monkees album in 2016 is miraculous enough, but that said album, Good Times!, is nothing short of a masterpiece is astounding." RTÉ stated, "keeping it analogue and raw, Good Times! is a joy. This is one band reunion that doesn't besmirch the legacy and even offers something new and fresh." However, it bemoaned the fact that "Noel Gallagher teams up with Paul Weller to dash off 'Birth Of An Accidental Hipster', another droll sub-Kinks ditty but it sounds bloated compared to the effervescence of what's gone before." ABC News concluded that "This is mandatory listening for any Monkees fan." Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic gave the album 4 out of 5 stars, stating the album is "a joyous revival of the cheerful jangle that characterized the group's big '60s hits."[3]
Will Hodgkinson of The Times gave the album 3 out of 5, and the Evening Standard gave the album three stars, declaring that the album "doesn't quite work as it's let down by a flat production and the lack of anything approaching their more magical moments. For all that, though, it's no disgrace".
Tony Clayton-Lea of The Irish Times noted that "Songs by Death Cab for Cutie songwriter Ben Gibbard ("Me & Magdalena"), XTC's Andy Partridge ("You Bring The Summer"), and Noel Gallagher/Paul Weller ("Birth of an Accidental Hipster") brilliantly reference the band's 1960s glory days, but as a cohesive project it's more unpleasant valley Sunday than anything else."
At Metacritic, the album has a metascore of 79, indicating generally favorable reviews. Its user score is 8.7, indicating universal acclaim.[13]
The album is the highest charting Monkees album in the US since The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees in 1968 and the highest charting in the UK since Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd. in 1967.
Publication | Accolade | Year | Rank | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mojo | The 50 Best Albums of 2016 | 2016 | ||
AllMusic | Favorite Rock Albums of 2016 | 2016 |
Credits adapted from CD liner notes.[5]
The Monkees
Additional musicians
Technical
Chart (2016) | Peak position |
---|---|
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[14] | 130 |
New Zealand Heatseekers Albums (RMNZ)[15] | 10 |
US Billboard Vinyl Albums [16] | 1 |