Original released on LP Colgems COM-101
(US 1966, October 10)

The Monkees'
first album was a huge success, following on the number one single "Last
Train to Clarksville."
The Monkees spent 78 weeks on the Billboard chart including an astounding 13
weeks at number one. The record wasn't only a commercial juggernaut, it also stands
as one of the great debuts of all time, and while the record and the group have
faced criticism from rock purists through the ages, it stands the test of time perfectly
well, sounding as alive and as much fun 40 years later. Prefabricated? Yes.
After a fast buck? Yes. Exhilarating? Yes! Fab? Definitely! The music may have
been created by studio cats instead of the band themselves but the pros weren't
merely phoning it in. Listen to the aggressive guitars on "Saturday's
Child," the raw romp of "Tomorrow's Gonna Be Another Day," or
the cascading wall of guitars and fiddles on "Sweet Young Thing," and
you know they weren't just padding their bank accounts. They were playing some
real rock & roll and you can credit the producers for that. Producers Tommy
Boyce and Bobby Hart aren't craftsmen on the level of Phil Spector (who was
actually approached to produce the band but probably laughed the Monkees' team
right out the door), but they knew how to craft razor-sharp and exciting pop
tunes with lots of spark, soul, and the occasional psychedelic touch.

And they
knew how to get great vocals from their group. While the Monkees themselves
didn't do much more than sing, the singing they did was first-rate. You'd be
hard-pressed to find a better pop/rock vocalist than Micky Dolenz; his work on
"Take a Giant Step" and "Last Train to Clarksville" is thrilling and bursting
with life. The other lead vocalist, Davy Jones, thankfully doesn't get a chance
to show off his full range of annoyingly whimsical mannerisms; Boyce and Hart
keep him under wraps and his vocals on "I Wanna Be Free" and
"I'll Be True to You" are achingly sweet, even a little soulful in a
very British way. Boyce and Hart weren't the only great producers involved with
the record, as a listen to "Papa Gene's Blues" and "Sweet Young
Thing" show that Mike Nesmith also knew how to produce great pop music,
despite what Don Kirshner may have thought. The various producers, supervisors,
and coordinators were also savants when it came to both writing (in Boyce,
Hart, and Nesmith's case) and picking songs for the group. Indeed, the only
songs that feel like filler are the rudimentary rocker "Let's Dance
On" and the silly "Gonna Buy Me a Dog," but even these
throwaways are charming and stand up to repeated listens. It's easy to see why
kids were buying this record as fast as the label could press them up. Despite
the origins of the group and the behind-the-scenes machinations, the music
itself is young, exciting, and free. Who cares who did what and who didn't do
what when the results are as rock-solid as "Last Train to Clarksville" or "Sweet Young
Thing"? You could stack the Monkees up against almost any record of 1966
and the competition would be fierce, with this record coming out on top except
in only a few cases.