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Circle Sky

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

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

Background and inspiration

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

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 Auditorium, 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 an Australian Monkees compilation in the early 1980s, Monkeemania (40 Timeless Hits),[1] while an alternate studio take appeared on a Rhino Records album, Monkee Flips, in 1984. A stereo recording of the concert version finally appeared on Missing Links Volume Two, in 1990. This version on the Apple iTunes Store is incorrect, but Amazon's MP3 is correct.

A reworked version of the song opened the Monkees's 1996 reunion album, Justus, featuring a rare Davy Jones guitar performance. This version is harder rocking than the original but is otherwise identical musically. The lyrics, however, have been changed in several spots.

Personnel

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

  1. ^ "'Monkeemania: 40 Timeless Hits From The Monkees' LP". The Monkee Live Almanac. 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2015-01-14.