Showing posts with label Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. Show all posts

Saturday, October 4, 2025

10 SONGS: 10/4/2025

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1304.

DOLENZ, JONES, BOYCE AND HART: I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight


This week, we put the TIRnRR spotlight on Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, serving as our Featured Performers and also as our Featured Songwriters. And we kicked that off with a 1976 live-in-Japan performance by Dolenz, Jones, Boyce and Hart, reuniting Tommy and Bobby with former co-workers Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones from the Monkees. The guys who sang 'em and the guys who wrote 'em! And in this case they're all singing "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight," a song that was Boyce and Hart's biggest hit as performers. Great, great song in either rendition.

THE FLASHCUBES: She

A feature on Boyce and Hart as songwriters allowed us to program a bunch of their songs as interpreted by a number of different artists. That includes the Monkees (of course!), as well as a few covers of B & H tunes recorded by and primarily associated with the Monkees. Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes cut a fabulous version of the 1966 More Of The Monkees album track "She" for a 2017 Monkees tribute album called Listen To The Bands. I confess that I suggested the 'Cubes do "Love Is Only Sleeping," but the 'Cubes rightly knew that "She" was a better match. HEY!

THE ARMOIRES: You're Not The Police

From the Flashcubes covering the Monkees, let's move to the Armoires covering the Flashcubes. From the various-artists blockbuster Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, the Armoires apply Byrdswax and all sortsa Cheap Tricks for their rendition of the Flashcubes' "You're Not The Police." Flippin' the song's gender POV delivers extra added gravitas, drawing a rockin' pop line in the sand, a line that will not be breached. Back off, bro! If I wanted the cops, I'd be watching TV.

THE FOUR TOPS: Last Train To Clarksville

It still feels weird to me that my favorite Motown group the Four Tops covered a Monkees song, and weirder still that they covered two Monkees songs, Neil Diamond's "I'm A Believer" and Boyce and Hart's "Last Train To Clarksville." Both of these were on the Four Tops' 1967 album Reach Out, an LP that mixed the two Monkees covers with covers of the Left Banke's "Walk Away Renee," Tim Hardin's "If I Were A Carpenter," and the Association's "Cherish," all alongside some new tunes crafted at Hitsville USA.

The Four Tops' Left Banke and Tim Hardin covers were magnificent, and the album gave the world the outstanding Four Tops classics "Reach Out I'll Be There," "Bernadette," "Standing In The Shadows Of Love," and "7 Rooms Of Glow." In contrast, neither of these fine Monkees songs is a proper fit for the Four Tops. Interesting as oddities only.

JAY AND THE AMERICANS: Come A Little Bit Closer

When we consider Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart's success as songwriters, a lot of people (me included) automatically think of Boyce and Hart songs recorded by the Monkees. That list includes "(Theme From) The Monkees," "Last Train To Clarksville," "I Wanna Be Free," "Let's Dance On." "She," "(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone," "I'll Spend My Life With You," "Mr. Webster," "Words," "Valleri," "P. O. Box 9847," "Through The Looking Glass," and "I Never Thought It Peculiar," among others. There's even a Boyce and Hart song ("Whatever's Right") on the Monkees' 2016 triumph Good Times!, a track begun in the '60s and finished in this high-flyin' 21st century.

One of Boyce and Hart's most notable successes outside of the Monkees' aegis is "Come A Little Bit Closer," which they wrote with Wes Farrell. It was a # 3 hit for Jay and the Americans in 1964, and an integral part of my childhood musical memories. MY kind of song!

TOMMY BOYCE AND BOBBY HART: Out And About

Boyce and Hart followed their success with the Monkees by trying to establish themselves as a recording act, the guys who sang 'em and the guys who wrote 'em. The above-noted "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight" was their only Top 20 hit (# 8 in 1967). Nonetheless, their established track record as tunesmiths and producers made them bona fide contenders in the pop music sweepstakes.

The guys' pursuit of brass rings and gold records led them to a guest appearance on the TV sitcom I Dream Of Jeannie. The show aired on NBC, the very same network that aired The Monkees. The episode included a scene set in a record store, which displayed copies of Headquarters (ironically, the album released after Boyce and Hart were effectively relieved of duties as Monkees producers). The ensuing hijinks portrayed cute 'n' magical Jeannie's efforts to move into rock 'n' roll artist management with Boyce and Hart as her first clients. 

I haven't watched this episode in a very long time, but a quick visit to YouTube supports my memory that Boyce and Hart lip-synced two of their records on the show: "Girl, I'm Out To Get You" (as Jeannie uses her magic to turn Tommy and Bobby into musicians, perhaps a sly shot at the assembly process that created the Monkees), and "Out And About," the latter with the lovely Jeannie herself sitting in on drums as they audition for Wall of Sound producer and future murderer Phil Spector.

The sitcom exposure was not sufficient to lift the "Out And About" single higher than # 39. BUT! They did get to meet Jeannie.

ANNE RICHMOND BOSTON: Mr. Webster

The Monkees (well, Micky Dolenz and some studio pros) first recorded Boyce and Hart's "Mr. Webster" during the sessions for what became the 1967 album More Of The Monkees. That version was originally unreleased, and the group returned to it in '67 for a fresh recording used on their album Headquarters, the Monkees' third album and the first to feature the Monkees themselves as the musicians in the studio. As produced by Boyce and Hart and played by studio musicians, the first recorded version is overly melodramatic, even ponderous, in telling its tale of a long-tenured and underappreciated bank teller; for Headquarters, the Monkees worked with producer Chip Douglas to give the song an underlying bounce that actually enhances the drama without detracting from it. The Headquarters "Mr. Webster" is the definitive "Mr. Webster."

Anne Richmond Boston of the Swimming Pool Q's recorded a cover of "Mr. Webster" for the 1992 compilation Here No Evil--A Tribute To The Monkees. Boston's "Mr. Webster"  threads the needle between the two disparate Monkees takes, retaining drama but eschewing melodrama in a slow burn that is both folkier and silkier. 

THE MONKEES: (I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone [live]

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

REDD KROSS: Blow You A Kiss In The Wind

In addition to appearing on I Dream Of Jeannie, Boyce and Hart were also on an episode of Bewitched, once again playing themselves and once again gettin' mixed up with a magic chick. Two magic chicks in this case, the show's star Samantha and her wicked identical cousin Serena, both played by Patty Duke...er, I mean Elizabeth Montgomery. Jeez, you can lose your mind when magical cousins are two of a kind. 

Where was I? Right: On Bewitched, our heroes perform "I'll Blow You A Kiss In The Wind" at the Cosmos Cotillion. And, continuing a TV tradition from The Monkees (where a storyline called for Michael Nesmith to be credited as the author of the Boyce and Hart composition "Gonna Buy Me A Dog"), Bewitched presents Serena as the author of "I'll Blow You A Kiss In The Wind." You can re-live and remember the episode's performances of the song by Serena and by Boyce and Hart right here.

You know who else remembers Boyce and Hart on Bewitched? Why, Redd Kross, of course. Hawthorne, California's other great group included a cover of "Blow You A Kiss In The Wind" on their 1984 EP Teen Babes From Monsanto. Serena could not be reached for comment.

THE MINUS 5: Boyce & Hart

On Sunday, the afternoon before this week's evening broadcast of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio, I was listening to former Paul Revere and the Raiders lead singer Mark Lindsay's Underground Garage show American Revolution. In a set paying tribute to Boyce and Hart, Lindsay played the Minus 5's specific tribute to the pair, a wonderful track called--what else?--"Boyce & Hart."

And it was only the fact that I was driving at the time that prevented me from kicking myself as the track played. Why didn't I think to include that in our own B & H feature? The song comes from the Minus 5's album Of Monkees And Men, a collection of Minus 5 originals inspired by the Monkees and their milieu. We did include another track from Of Monkees And Men earlier in this week's show ("Micky's A Cool Drummer"), but I completely forgot about the even more appropriate "Boyce & Hart." My brain was apparently out and about. I wonder what it's doing tonight?

Ah, but fortune stepped in! An unexpected complication forced us to swap out one of the tracks played during the show's coda, and that provided a perfect opportunity to sub in the Minus 5's sublime "Boyce & Hart" at the very end of the show. Thank you, MonkeeMen! And Godspeed Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Friday, September 26, 2025

10 SONGS: 9/26/2025

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1303.

THE TURTLES: Love In The City

A lot of music lovers may not realize how successful the Turtles were in the '60s. Everyone knows the group's huge # 1 smash "Happy Together," and many recall "Elenore," "You Showed Me," and "She'd Rather Be With Me," if not quite in the sheer numbers of those who remember "Happy Together."

Still, four big hits is already a pretty good pop c.v. The Turtles had eight Billboard Top 20 singles, and each of 'em is good to flat-out great: A cover of Bashful Bob Dylan's "It Ain't Me Babe" (# 8, 1965), "You Baby" (# 20, 1966), "Happy Together" (# 1, 1967), "She'd Rather Be With Me" (# 3, 1967), "You Know What I Mean" (# 12, 1967), "She's My Girl" (# 14, 1967), "Elenore" (# 6, 1968), "You Showed Me" (# 6, 1969)--plus a # 29 showing for 1965's fantastic "Let Me Be." Hell, the Turtles played at the White House in 1969--Presidential daughter Tricia Nixon was a fan--and while a POTUS gig doesn't exactly enhance a rock band's street cred, it does illustrate that the Turtles were a big deal. I wish more people appreciated that fact. I wish the Philistines in charge of The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame would acknowledge it.

Former Turtles singer Mark Volman passed away this month. The Turtles were the Featured Performers on an episode of TIRnRR many years ago, and this week we wanted to expand that feature to also include post-Turtles work by Flo & Eddie (Volman and his long-time musical collaborator and fellow Turtle Howard Kaylan, a partnership that predates their status as Turtles). We programmed four tracks by Flo & Eddie, a number of tracks they did backing other artists, and four tracks by the Turtles.

We did not play any of the Turtles' eight Top 20 hits, nor the # 29 "Let Me Be."

This decision was not born out of some smug hipsterism--the hits are wonderful, and should be played--but out of a desire to go a little further into the Turtles library. Maybe one of the four (the Turtles' version of "It Was A Very Good Year," which predates Sinatra's well-known take) could be called a deep cut. I wanted to play the Battle Of The Bands album cut "Surfer Dan," but time restraints forced us to use the slightly shorter "It Was A Very Good Year" instead. 

Our other three Turtles tunes were "Love In The City," "Grim Reaper Of Love," and Warren Zevon's "Outside Chance," and they can generally be found on any decent Turtles best-of set. They are my three favorite Turtles tracks.

We opened with my # 1 Turtles pick, "Love In The City." It comes from 1969's Ray Davies-produced Turtle Soup, the final Turtles album. The song was released as a single, barely charted at # 91, but I love it without reservation. 

(This week's playlist commentary contains almost all of a reminiscence I wrote several years about my origin as a Turtles fan. You can read the entire original post here.)

TOMMY BOYCE AND BOBBY HART: I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight

The spotlight on Flo & Eddie didn't leave us sufficient time to salute the late performer and songwriter Bobby Hart. Hart was best-known for his work with the late Tommy Boyce, primarily as songwriters but also as a performing duo who made the rounds of 1960s TV sitcoms Bewitched and I Dream Of Jeannie. "I Wonder What She's Doing Tonight" was a # 8 hit in 1968, far and away their highest-charting single as a recording act, but acts like the Monkees and Jay and the Americans had substantial success with gems from the Boyce and Hart songbook. We'll hear a few of those on our next show, as Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart will be our Featured Performers and our Featured Songwriters.

ROB MOSS AND SKIN-TIGHT SKIN: Good Hair Day

Friends of TIRnRR Rob Moss and Skin-Tight have undertaken a series of split-single partnerships with a select group of other performers, with Moss and company recording a cover of one of the guest artist's song, and the guest artist diving into the Rob Moss Songbook. A split-single with Shake Some! A split single with the Amplifier Heads! A split single with Arthur Alexander! And now, a split single with Brother Eytan Mirsky.

After playing a familiar favorite ("My Little Tricycle") from Eytan's own new album All Over The Map in our first set, we opened this week's second set with Rob Moss and his lads covering Eytan's "Good Hair Day." And we played Eytan's version of the Rob Moss classic "What Happened (To The Rock 'n' Roll)?" to kick off our sixth set. 

SPLITSVILLE: I Was A Teenage Frankenstein

Why it CAN be: The return of Splitsville with their ace 2025 album Mobtown has been all hit and no split, and they postscript the triumph of Mobtown with a better-than-the-original remake of their own neckbolt-outta-the-blue "I Was A Teenage Frankenstein." It's ALIVE! Well, it's studio, but never mind that, 'cuz it's SWELL! And it comes to us as part of Big Stir Records' epic various-artists Halloween blowout Chilling, Thrilling Hooks And Haunted Harmonies, so Frankie say Hey, cool! More of the chilling, the thrilling, and the haunted on our next show, courtesy of North Carolina's phenomenal pop combo the Spongetones.

THE VERBS: I Need Glue

Speaking of epic various-artists sets from the Big Stir label, let's treat you to another airing of Meegan Voss, Steve Jordan, and their rockin' pop dba the Verbs' cover of the Flashcubes' "I Need Glue." It's all part of Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and we encourage you to buy multiple copies of that album right here.

THE GROOVIE GHOULIES: (She's My) Vampire Girlfriend

Love bites.

SLYBOOTS:  If We Could Let Go

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

THE RAMONES: Chop Suey

Flo & Eddie provided backing vocals for two tracks by the Ramones. We played "Poison Heart" (from the Ramones' 1991 album Mondo Bizarro) earlier in the show, and returned to the scene of the lobotomy in our next-to-last set for a spin of "Chop Suey." "Chop Suey" comes from the soundtrack of the 1983 movie Get Crazy. In the 1994 interviews that eventually became my book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones, both Joey Ramone and Johnny Ramone remembered the song. Johnny's recollection of "Chop Suey" was not fond:

Before the next album, the Ramones contributed a track called “Chop Suey” to the soundtrack of a movie called Get Crazy. The track was produced by Busta Jones.

JOHNNY: Oh, horrible track. I don’t even know if I’m on it anymore. I don’t hear me on it. I played, but I don’t hear it. I don’t know whose harebrained idea that was—probably [Ramones manager Gary Kurfirst]’s [laughs]. Bad idea.

JOEY: [Rock 'n' Roll High director Allan Arkush]’s next film was Get Crazy. I had written a song called “Chop Suey.” Originally, I had got the B-52's to sing on it, and there was some kind of a problem. And then Flo and Eddie sang on it [instead]. So, eventually maybe we can put out that [original] record.

There was a report around that time that you were going to be doing an album with Busta Jones.

JOEY: I don’t think it was really true. Around that period, I was hangin’ out with Busta Jones and Jerry Harrison. I was hanging out at Electric Lady with them, and the B-52's, and he was working with them. He mentioned about, you know, doing a song with us, and that’s really how [“Chop Suey”] came about. And initially the B-52's were singing background on those parts, the “Chop Suey” parts.

JOHNNY: The song sucked, right [laughs]?

[One other little oddball ricochet relating to the Ramones and Flo & Eddie, and it's something I didn't know when I interviewed the Ramones in 1994: Bruce Springsteen had originally intended to give his song "Hungry Heart" to the Ramones. It is, frankly, a song I've never liked, and I can't even imagine how a Ramones version would sound. Didn't matter; Broooce kept the song for himself, and it became his first legit hit single in 1980. Flo & Eddie sang back up on Springsteen's version.]

THE MOTHERS: Happy Together

Our plan to avoid the Turtles' biggest numbers didn't preclude playing this live version of "Happy Together." When the Turtles broke up in 1970, Volman and Kaylon joined Frank Zappa's group the Mothers of Invention. It was as duly-appointed Mothers that Mark & Howard began billing themselves as Flo & Eddie, originally the Phlorescent Leech & Eddie. Turtles bassist Jim Pons also joined the Mothers, so we got your Turtles rock band street cred right here, pal. A 1971 recording of the Mothers at Fillmore East preserves an exuberant performance of Flo & Eddie singin' the Turtles signature tune. 

THE CROSSFIRES: Fiberglass Jungle

Before becoming Flo & Eddie or fronting the Turtles, Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan were presumably happy together in an early '60s surf instrumental combo called the Crossfires. I think I first heard the Crossfires on a Rhino Records surf instrumental compilation in the '80s, I somehow heard their unique take on "The William Tell Overture" some time after that, and "Fiberglass Jungle" is on the Ace Records set The Birth Of Surf, a CD which held a permanent berth in my CD carrying case during the pre-pandemic days when TIRnRR was a live studio broadcast.

We've played "Fiberglass Jungle" at least once before. This week, we play it again as This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio salutes Flo & Eddie.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.