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August 23, 2006
It's not every day that pop culture icons roll through
my town, so you could imagine my surprise, and delight, when I learned that Davy Jones was to be playing in our
little city. Davy Jones will always be best remembered as the
heartthrob of the musical quartet, The Monkees, who hit it big in the late
1960s; and became one of the greatest teen idols in pop culture history. Nearly immediately after
hearing that Davy was coming to town I began to make attempts to contact his
people but to no avail. However, after I'd all but given up I received a call
from Verne who, only hours before the concert, had managed to get us a pre-show
audience with the famed entertainer and former heartthrob. I already had tickets
to the show, but Verne was told that he and I were to make our way backstage on
the concert grounds, hook up with Davy's people and then from there we'd meet
Davy and discuss an interview time for the next day. Within hours Verne and I made our way to
the concert grounds and fought our way through fans, volunteers, and eventually
came upon pretty much every major dignitary in the city - all waiting for Davy's
arrival. The Mayor was there. The newspaper editor was there. Anchormen and
radio announcers and politicians and pretty much everybody deemed important was
waiting for Davy to arrive. Eventually a white stretch limo appeared and out
came Davy Jones himself. Davy smiled and took pictures, signed autographs, and
was led into a private trailer guarded by an armed police officer. In the hubbub
and sea of ego two people got left behind - Verne and I. It was looking pretty
hopeless and seemed that, although we were expected by Davy, we were not going
to get into that trailer because nobody was taking us seriously. However, we
finally got set up with Davy's bassist, Mark Clarke, who was also the man who
was clearly running things. Eventually Mark lead me and Verne to where the mayor
and the newspaper guys and TV anchors and local politicians
weren't going to go. We were lead into Davy Jones' private trailer. As we
entered the small trailer, Davy sat on a bench facing the door and greeted us
warmly and beckoned us to sit down. I sat down next to the singer while Verne
sat nearby on a bed. In the trailer with Davy was his keyboardist, John Blair,
and the multi-talented Aviva Maloney who is not only a close friend of Davy's
but plays a dozen different instruments in his band. Introductions were made and
immediately Davy wanted to know if we had watched any of the World Cup game that
had been played that day. Thankfully I had watched some World Cup earlier in the
week and could carry on a half intelligent conversation. We were reminded by
Mark that we only had fifteen minutes before Davy had to go on stage so Verne
started the tape and recorded what would be our first of two very personal
encounters with a pop culture legend. We may have only had fifteen minutes, but
we managed to pack a lot of stuff into our first meeting. Get ready to listen to
Davy talk about Broadway, The Beatles, Charles Manson, Don Kirshner and Monkee
strife as
CONFESSIONS OF A POP
CULTURE ADDICT PROUDLY PRESENTS
GETTING DAVY JONES:
PART 1 OF OUR INTERVIEW WITH DAVY JONES
Sam: I really want to tell you Davy, that it's
really exciting that your playing in town today. It's not very often that we get
pop icons like you in this city. I also want to thank you for agreeing to meet
with us today.
Davy Jones: Well this is all like taking your life in your
hands. You got to hold on. You've got to have the rhythm and that's what the
business is about. You've got to know when to move into certain areas. You've
got to know how to speak to people. When to speak to people. Y'know. Y'know.
Change the way you look at things and the way that things change. You've really
got to be very sensible and you've got to realize that I don't feel like it's
any different than the school play. I mean, as far as I'm concerned... The
Monkees... Oliver... everything else... has the same level of importance to me.
Y'know... the same level of importance discussing things with you as with the
Washington Times. That's the difference. It's reaching the people. And our
philosophy when we play is we don't care if there's a hundred people or, y'know,
last week we played in Vegas and we played to twenty thousand people. Now that
may seem strange but y'know, there's a connection there. We also did an e-bay
convention and they happen to be using "Daydream Believer" right now.
Sam: So I found a clip of you playing the Artful Dodger on
the Ed Sullivan stage on the computer recently and...
Davy: Oh. That's scary!
Sam: No. It was fun! Actually, the girl that was playing
Nancy! Wow! She was gorgeous!
Davy: Georgia Brown. Yeah. We had a thing, her and I. We
never did the naughties but I used to hang out with her... and I have a book and
it's interesting because I write like I'm talking to you. Over the kitchen
table. But I was in New York... well... I first came to Toronto in 1962 and I
did my first performance of Oliver on this side of the world at the O'Keefe
Centre which is now called the Hummingbird Center.
Sam: I still call it the O'Keefe Centre.
Davy: I still call it the O'Keefe Centre too. But I like to
go across the street to that marketplace with all the food. You've been
there?
Sam: I've been there.
Davy: It's absolutely excellent - y'know? So anyways, yeah,
I did that and I was at the O'Keefe and then we went down to New York and just
to give you an example of show business and the tricks that one plays: It's like
a mine field to start and if you go the distance then, y'know, I think that's
important. I've said that a few times over the last couple of months because you
don't realize what it entails to do what we do. It's not just coming in and
setting up and then singing and taking money and going. I mean - it's traveling
which is the hardest thing to do these days. But when we got to New York in
1962... Christmastime... I had my sixteenth birthday in New York actually... so
I got there and the papers were on strike and there was a very important guy
named David Merrick who was a big producer and because the papers were on strike
it was a very difficult thing to advertise the show and let people know the show
was there and you couldn't do anything - so he contacted... uh... he got the
phone book and he looked through it. He looked at New Jersey. Clyde Barnes, New
Jersey. Walter Winchell... you know... he did Rhode Island. He gave them dinner,
comped them in, saw the show and then he'd put on the outside "Clyde Barnes
said, 'This is a Smash'" or "Walter Winchell says, 'This is Wonderful'". You
know, that kind of stuff. So it's not what you got, it's what people think you
got. You know, Jimi Hendrix. Kurt Cobain. That kind of stuff. You know, I mean,
what can I say? I mean I worked with Hendrix. He was our opening act for The
Monkees.
Sam: Right. Wasn't he was booed off the stage?
Davy: Well, not all the time. It's just like Charlie Manson
auditioning for The Monkees. No, he never did.
Sam: He didn't?
Davy: No. Because somebody said, "Hey! Everybody but the
kitchen sink!" So when it came down to that it wasn't really true. It's just
like that old whispering game...
Sam: Well, if Charlie had joined The Monkees you'd be
singing "Look at Your Game Girl" and Peter Tork would have started his own
cult.
Davy: Well, he's probably capable of that. I understand he
joined a one man band but he gave it up because of musical differences. He's
very tricky. He's a tricky kind of guy. I'd be very careful if you get a chance
to do an interview with him. What you really should do is get all The
Beatles.
Sam: Well you were on Sullivan the same night as the
Beatles...
Davy: Yeah, well I was there before them... I was there in
'62, '63.
Sam: So it was you who started the British
Invasion.
Davy: Well not really. It was shows like "Stop the World I
Want to Get Off", "Oliver", "Beckett", "Beyond the Fringe" all these different
shows..."Pickwick" and all that. That was the sort of things I did then.
However, you know, they talk about The Monkees being manufactured and such. The
Beatles were the first manufactured band! They wore the same suits. They wore
the same shoes I'm wearing now. Composição, which is a dance show. They wore the
same haircuts... almost. Y'know, and Brian Epstein fired Pete Best who I met a
couple months ago. We did a show together and put somebody else in there who
John liked or whatever the deal may be. I'm not quite sure. You know, they're
all variations on the theme that goes along as a band. Y'know, we've been
together a long time, this band and as you go along you find that the elements
of that particular idea don't particularly gel anymore and people change their
minds, much the same as
what happened to The Monkees. The Monkees were fine for
the first year but then all of a sudden they got out and were looking at the
second album we did and that's when it hit the fan.
Sam: That's when Michael Nesmith hit the door.
Davy: Because we were dressed in JC Penny clothes - they
were sponsors. And Tom McCann shoes. What does the post office have in common
with Tom McCann? Fifty thousand pairs of loafers. I mean how ridiculous! That
they have clothing on that doesn't match their style when they leave the place.
This was a promotion. They didn't get that. They didn't get the idea that this
was about show business. This wasn't about anything other than the music
department which was run by Don Kirshner. Don Kirshner didn't discover The
Monkees. Don Kirshner wasn't responsible for anything other than the musical
side of it.
Sam: Why did Don Kirshner become the scapegoat?
Davy: Because Burt Schneider and Bob Rafelson wanted to move
onto "Five Easy Pieces" and "The King of Marvin Gardens" and they were very
familiar at the time with Jack Nicholson and Peter Fonda came to Burt Schneider,
who was the son of the president of Columbia Pictures - I wonder how he got a
gig there - and he said, y'know, Don Kirshner is a pain in the ass and... a pain
in the butt... a pain in the rear... any of the above three... and so that was
it because Mike Nesmith didn't want it. Mike Nesmith was given a Beverly Hills
hotel, a check for two hundred and forty thousand dollars and he put his fist
through the wall. Not as a complaint because of the check but because Don
Kirshner was now claiming fame for The Monkees musical success. Well it
was
really Neil Diamond and Carol King and Harry Nilsson and Tommy Boyce and Bobby
Hart and Mike Nesmith.....who I think changed the face of pop music in a sense - if
you look at all of the list of his songs on all The Monkees albums. He had a
real country/rock feel going on and it was a transition. I think if Mike Nesmith
had stayed with it he would be writing songs for Shania Twain.
Mark Clarke: Five Minutes.
Davy to Mark: Okay.
Sam: Is Mike Nesmith as angry as he seems?
Davy: I think he's just getting old. He looks like a train
driver from Tulsa.
Aviva Maloney: He looks like my grandfather.
Mark: Three minutes Davy.
At this point we turned off the camera and knew that if we
stayed any longer we'd be overstaying our welcome. It was then that Davy told us
that he would be willing to meet with us again the next morning. It looked like
we had passed the screening process. It was agreed that we'd meet the next day
at the restaurant of the hotel where Davy was staying and we would continue our
conversation. We took our leave and went to find our seats to watch Davy's show
knowing that we would be meeting Davy again in a few hours for a second, and
this time a more personal and longer, interview.
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