"Circle Sky" is a song written by Michael Nesmith which appeared on The Monkees' sixth album, the Head soundtrack, and also in the film Head as a live concert performance.

"Circle Sky"
Song by The Monkees
from the album Head
ReleasedDecember 1, 1968
GenreRock[1]
LabelColgems
Songwriter(s)Michael Nesmith

Background and inspiration edit

The song is written and performed in style reminiscent to the work of musician Bo Diddley, staying mostly on a single chord (A Major), while strumming barre chords (from B Major to E Major) down the guitar neck for the intro, outro, and breaks, and from B minor to D minor for the bridge. The lyrics are impressions of sights and sounds on a Monkees tour, while "Hamilton's smiling down" refers to a Hamilton music stand, used for rehearsals and recording.

Release edit

While the movie included the song performed live by the Monkees in Salt Lake City, Utah on May 17, 1968 during a free show at the Valley Music Hall, the original soundtrack album instead substituted a studio recording, made by Nesmith and session musicians (an unexplained decision that became a major source of tension in the group). The film version intercut Vietnam War footage with concert footage and featured several mirrored shots of the band onstage.

A lo-fi transcription of the concert version was included on Monkeemania (40 Timeless Hits), a compilation from the early 1980s,[2] and an alternate studio take appeared on Monkee Flips in 1984. A stereo recording of the concert version appeared on Missing Links Volume Two in 1990.

A reworked version of the song opened the Monkees's 1996 reunion album Justus, featuring a rare performance by Davy Jones on guitar.

Personnel edit

Studio version:

  • Michael Nesmith - lead vocal, guitar, organ, percussion
  • Keith Allison - guitar
  • Bill Chadwick - guitar
  • Eddie Hoh - drums, percussion

Live version (May 17, 1968):

  • Michael Nesmith - lead vocal, guitar
  • Davy Jones - percussion, organ
  • Peter Tork - bass
  • Micky Dolenz - drums, percussion

Justus version:

  • Michael Nesmith - lead vocal, guitar
  • Davy Jones - guitar
  • Peter Tork - bass
  • Micky Dolenz - drums

References edit

  1. ^ Segretto, Mike (2022). "1968". 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Minute - A Critical Trip Through the Rock LP Era, 1955–1999. Backbeat. pp. 183–186. ISBN 9781493064601.
  2. ^ "'Monkeemania: 40 Timeless Hits From The Monkees' LP". The Monkee Live Almanac. 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2015-01-14.