Live 1967 (The Monkees album) explained

Live 1967
Type:live
Artist:the Monkees
Cover:Live 1967.JPG
Released:June 1987
Recorded:August 25–27, 1967
Venue:Seattle Center Coliseum (Seattle, Washington)[1] The Coliseum (Spokane, Washington)Memorial Coliseum (Portland, Oregon)
Genre:Pop rock
Length:58:30
Label:Rhino
Producer:Bert Schneider - Bob Rafelson
Prev Title:20th Anniversary Tour 1986
Prev Year:1987
Next Title:Missing Links
Next Year:1987

Live 1967 is a live album by the American pop rock band the Monkees, released in 1987 by Rhino Records. The album was compiled from show dates in Seattle, Portland and Spokane on their 1967 United States tour. The songs mostly feature the Monkees themselves singing and playing, although the "solo spots" for each member feature music by opening act the Sundowners.

In 2001, Rhino Handmade released all recordings from these shows—as well as a date in Mobile, Alabama—as a limited edition CD: .

During these dates, Davy Jones and Kim Capli of the Sundowners went by themselves to a local recording studio to make "Hard to Believe", which was included on the Monkees' album Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn, & Jones, Ltd. (1967).

Track listing

Personnel

Credits adapted from Rhino 1987 CD,[2] except where noted.

The Monkees

The Sundowners

Technical

Notes and References

  1. Summer 1967: The Complete U.S. Concert Recordings . Roland Worthington Hand . . . CD box set liner notes . 2001 . RHM2 7755 . Los Angeles, California.
  2. Live 1967 . The Monkees . The Monkees . . CD liner notes . 1987 . R2 70139 . Santa Monica, California.