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The Monkees - Music Box mp3

Tracklist

1D.W. Washburn
2Love Is Only Sleeping
3Oh, What A Night
4Words
5Tapioca Tundra
6I'll Spend My Life With You
7Dream World
8What Am I Doing Hangin' 'Round?
9She
10The Girl I Knew Somewhere
11Smile
12Come On In
13Pleasant Valley Sunday [Single Version]
14Do It In The Name Of Love [Micky Dolenz & Davy Jones]
15Someday Man
16Look Out (Here Comes Tomorrow) [Previously Unissued Extended Mix]
17Circle Sky [Live]
18(I'm Not Your) Steppin' Stone
19Zor And Zam
20The Door Into Summer
21I Won't Be The Same Without Her
22Daydream Believer
23Heart And Soul
24Papa Gene's Blues
25For Pete's Sake
26P.O. Box 9847
27Looking For The Good Times
28Midnight Train
29 1969-96
30Gonna Buy Me A Roo
31I Wanna Be Free [Album Version]
32Forget That Girl
33Sweet Young Thing
34I'm A Believer
35Steam Engine
36You And I
37Cuddly Toy
38Saturday's Child
39I'll Be Back Upon My Feet [First Recorded Version]
40While I Cry
41A Man Without A Dream
42Ditty Diego-War Chant
43Your Auntie Grizelda
44Love To Love
45A Little Bit Me, A Little Bit You
46Sunny Girlfriend
47I Don't Think You Know Me [First Recorded Version]
48No Time
49Shorty Blackwell
50Shades Of Gray
51The Girl I Left Behind Me [First Recorded Version]
52Daddy's Song [Previously Unissued Long Version]
53Valleri [First Recorded Version]
54She Hangs Out [Single Version]
55Do You Feel It Too?
56Nine Times Blue
57St. Matthew
58Tear The Top Right Off My Head
59As We Go Along
60Some Of Shelly's Blues
61Every Step Of The Way [Single Version]
62Through The Looking Glass
63Sometime In The Morning
64Let's Dance On
65 1968
66I Love You Better
67Valleri
68All Of Your Toys
69(Theme From) The Monkees
70Last Train To Clarksville
71The Kind Of Girl I Could Love
72All The King's Horses
73I Never Thought It Peculiar
74Star Collector
75MGBGT [Live]
76 1966
77Of You [Previously Unissued Mix]
78You And I
79Randy Scouse Git
80Carlisle Wheeling [First Recorded Version]
81Take A Giant Step
82Goin' Down
83Salesman
84 1967
85You Just May Be The One
86Can You Dig It
87When Love Comes Knockin' (At Your Door)
88Do Not Ask For Love [First Recorded Version]
89Listen To The Band [Single Version]
90Oh My My
91That Was Then, This Is Now [Micky Dolenz & Peter Tork]
92Auntie's Municipal Court
93Tear Drop City
94Daily Nightly
95Long Title: Do I Have To Do This All Over Again
96Mommy And Daddy
97It's Nice To Be With You
98I Wanna Be Free [First Version]
99Good Clean Fun
100Mary, Mary
101Porpoise Song (Theme From Head) [Single Version]
102If I Ever Get To Saginaw Again
103You Told Me

Versions

CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
R2 76706The Monkees Music Box ‎(4xCD, Comp, RM + Box, Dig)Rhino Records R2 76706US2001
81227-9731-8The Monkees Music Box ‎(4xCD, Comp, RM + Box, RE)Rhino Records 81227-9731-8Europe2012
8122-76706-2The Monkees Music Box ‎(4xCD, Comp, RM + Box, Dig)Rhino Records , Warner Strategic Marketing8122-76706-2Europe2001
R2 76706The Monkees Music Box ‎(4xCD, Comp, RM + Box, Dig)Rhino Records R2 76706Europe2001
8122797318The Monkees Music Box ‎(4xCD, Comp, RM)Rhino Records 8122797318Australia2012

Credits

  • DesignLisa Sutton , Sunshine Day Design
  • Liner Notes [Discographical Anotation]Andrew Sandoval, Gary Peterson
  • Producer [Box Set]Andrew Sandoval, Bill Inglot
  • Producer [Original Recordings]Bobby Hart, Bones Howe, Carole Bayer, Carole King, Chip Douglas, Douglas Farthing Hatlelid, Felton Jarvis, Gerry Goffin, Jack Keller, Jeff Barry, Michael Lloyd, Neil Sedaka, Roger Bechirian, The Monkees, Tommy Boyce
  • Remastered ByBill Inglot, Dan Hersch

Notes

Included a 96-page booklet with a complete Monkees history, session details, chart info, and more, plus loads of vintage photos (some published here for the first time)

Barcodes

  • Barcode: 0 81227 99019 0

Info

Music Box is a four-CD set by the Monkees. It replaced the previous Monkees box set, entitled Listen to the Band. In addition to music recorded in the 1960s, it also includes music from the Monkees reunions in 1986 and 1996, as well as previously unreleased versions. The Monkees: все альбомы, включая The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees , The Monkees Live - The Mike & Micky Show , Ten songs for you и другие. Альбом 2001 Песен: 99. The Monkees Present: Micky, David & Michael - The Monkees. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. The Monkees Music Box. The Monkees-All the King's Horses. The Monkees-Heart and Soul Single Version. The Monkees-Midnight Train. The Monkees-For Pete's Sake Closing Theme. The Monkees-Porpoise Song Theme from Head. The Monkees-Listen to the Band Single Version. The Monkees-The Door Into Summer. The Monkees-Every Step of the Way. The Monkees M. It's hard not to wonder why the four-disc Music Box even exists. After all, Rhino has not only released definitive reissues of all of the Monkees' studio albums, complete with bonus tracks, but the label has a series devoted to rarities Missing Links, a single-disc greatest hits album, a double-disc anthology, and another four-disc box, Listen to the Band, which is excellent. So where does that leave Music Box . Listen free to The Monkees Music Box Theme From The Monkees, I Wanna Be Free Fast version and more. 99 tracks 263:38. The Monkees Music Box is an unadulterated bargain. The four discs are packed with all the significant songs from the group and a lot of obscurities that are otherwise only available in very difficult to locate places. The alternate mix of Of You is worth the price of the set alone, and the up-tempo version of I Wanna Be Free is by far my preferred version of this track alternate versions of Look Out and She Hangs Out are also excellent. This Music Box 4-CD set offers all the songs found on the LTTB Rhino set, although there are some differences between lengths of songs and versions album vs single, stereo vs mono, plus many more songs. It's the most comprehensive collection to date. The Birds, The Bees & The Monkees - The Monkees

The Monkees - Music Box mp3

Performer: The Monkees

Title: Music Box

Country: Europe

Release date: 2008

Label: Rhino Records

Style: Pop Rock, Classic Rock

Catalog: 8122-79901-9

Genre: Rock / Pop

Size MP3: 2207 mb

Rating: 4.2 / 5

Votes: 144

Record source: 4 × CD, Compilation, Remastered Box Set, Digibook

MP3 Related to The Monkees - Music Box

Felolv
Replacing the Listen To The Band compilation, Music Box not only includes their songs from the 60’s but also from The Monkees’ reunions of 1986 and 1996, along with a couple previously unreleased versions to spice things up. Though the central question is why this outing exists at all, since Rhino has yet to release a definitive reissue of the band’s studio albums, along with cutting room floor outtakes and revisions.

With the first four Monkee albums all peaking at number one on the charts, and recorded in something like thirteen months between 1966 and 1967, it’s strange to consider that so much material was released in such a short time, followed by the soundtrack and movie Head. With that being said, many find it easy to dismiss The Monkees with the wave of their hand, yet if you spend any amount of time with this catalog, you’re going to come up with some sincerely unexpected gems that will give you pause, and have you searching their material for more of the same. While much of their music was safe AM radio fluff, and sanitized even more for television, there are some deeply psychedelic tracks such as “Daily Nightly,” “Oh My My,” “Can You Dig It,” “Porpoise Song,” “Goin’ Down, “ “Words,” and “Auntie’s Municipal Court” that sound as fresh today as they did when we were all too cool to give the Monkees the time of day, yet alone to investigate this material back in the heady days and nights of the mid 60’s, where songs that if released today by other neo-psych bands would stop you in your tracks for an instant download. It’s also enchanting to hear how quickly they managed to gain control of their instruments and create this material laced with layered musical and vocal harmonies. I realize that that last statement alone would give people pause, but hey, there were many bands such as Spacemen 3, The Cure, Talking Heads and House Of Love, to mention a few, who went through an awful lot of on the job training, all bands who are today highly revered today.

As of now, this set is probably the singular high point for immersing yourself in the career of The Monkees. Even John Lennon to Mike Nesmith said that he and Yoko never missed one of their shows. While The Monkees certainly did not come together as a band, they certainly left as one, a band who pioneered recording artists rights, freedoms of expression, and control over their own material. Laced within this set are some alternative versions, mono vs. stereo versions, some live material, and some infectious grooves that will hang on forever. Now … there’s no way I’m ever gonna try and convince you that all of the material found here is first rate, or that even half of it is worth keeping. What I am saying is that out of all of these tracks I settled on thirty that were just too fine to pass up, and from those I created my own compilation, one that rides comfortably in my back pocket.

Review by Jenell Kesler
Felolv
Replacing the Listen To The Band compilation, Music Box not only includes their songs from the 60’s but also from The Monkees’ reunions of 1986 and 1996, along with a couple previously unreleased versions to spice things up. Though the central question is why this outing exists at all, since Rhino has yet to release a definitive reissue of the band’s studio albums, along with cutting room floor outtakes and revisions.

With the first four Monkee albums all peaking at number one on the charts, and recorded in something like thirteen months between 1966 and 1967, it’s strange to consider that so much material was released in such a short time, followed by the soundtrack and movie Head. With that being said, many find it easy to dismiss The Monkees with the wave of their hand, yet if you spend any amount of time with this catalog, you’re going to come up with some sincerely unexpected gems that will give you pause, and have you searching their material for more of the same. While much of their music was safe AM radio fluff, and sanitized even more for television, there are some deeply psychedelic tracks such as “Daily Nightly,” “Oh My My,” “Can You Dig It,” “Porpoise Song,” “Goin’ Down, “ “Words,” and “Auntie’s Municipal Court” that sound as fresh today as they did when we were all too cool to give the Monkees the time of day, yet alone to investigate this material back in the heady days and nights of the mid 60’s, where songs that if released today by other neo-psych bands would stop you in your tracks for an instant download. It’s also enchanting to hear how quickly they managed to gain control of their instruments and create this material laced with layered musical and vocal harmonies. I realize that that last statement alone would give people pause, but hey, there were many bands such as Spacemen 3, The Cure, Talking Heads and House Of Love, to mention a few, who went through an awful lot of on the job training, all bands who are today highly revered today.

As of now, this set is probably the singular high point for immersing yourself in the career of The Monkees. Even John Lennon to Mike Nesmith said that he and Yoko never missed one of their shows. While The Monkees certainly did not come together as a band, they certainly left as one, a band who pioneered recording artists rights, freedoms of expression, and control over their own material. Laced within this set are some alternative versions, mono vs. stereo versions, some live material, and some infectious grooves that will hang on forever. Now … there’s no way I’m ever gonna try and convince you that all of the material found here is first rate, or that even half of it is worth keeping. What I am saying is that out of all of these tracks I settled on thirty that were just too fine to pass up, and from those I created my own compilation, one that rides comfortably in my back pocket.

Review by Jenell Kesler