- Valleri
Infobox Single
Name = Valleri
Artist =The Monkees
from Album =The Birds, The Bees & the Monkees
B-side = "Tapioca Tundra"
Released =March 2 ,1968
Format = 7" 45 RPM
Genre = Rock
Length = 2:16
Label = Colgems
Writer =Tommy Boyce ,Bobby Hart
Producer =The Monkees
Audio sample? =
Certification =
Last single ="Daydream Believer "
(1967)
This single ="Valleri"
(1968)
Next single ="D.W. Washburn "
(1968)
Misc ="Valleri" is asong written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart forThe Monkees , who had a #3 onBillboard Hot 100 and #1 onCash Box with it in early 1968. The song also rose to #12 in the UK.Responding to
Screen Gems president and music supervisorDon Kirshner 's early-morning request for a "girl's-name song" to be used in the Monkees'stelevision series , Boyce and Hart improvised "Valleri" on their way to Kirshner's office, after pretending over the telephone that the song was already finished. Nonetheless, Kirshner was pleased with their work, and "Valleri" took its place on the Monkees recording schedule, with Boyce and Hart producing the original sessions in August 1966.The original recording (with instrumental backing by the
Candy Store Prophets , plussession musician Louie Shelton contributing aflamenco esque guitar solo) was featured in the show's first season in 1967; a staged performance showedMichael Nesmith copying Shelton's guitar licks, and singer Davy Jones appearing to physically outgrow his bandmates, throughforced perspective and camera trick shots. While the first version of "Valleri" went unreleased, a few off-air recordings received radio airplay (thanks toDJ s taping the audio directly from the video), and later surfaced on bootleg recordings.By the end of 1967, the Monkees had gone from only singing on their records (to meet their filming, recording, and appearance schedules) to also playing, to a mix of both. Their fifth album, "
The Birds, The Bees & the Monkees ", rounded out the selection of songs from the show to appear on record, with the second season (1967-1968) being its last. Assuming both performing and producing roles, the Monkees remade both "I'll Be Back Up On My Feet " and "Valleri", duplicating the latter as closely as possible to the original, to the point of bringing back the Candy Store Prophets and Louie Shelton to perform. Boyce and Hart were not pleased that their production was not being used, but understood the reasons, and still collected writer's royalties.When
Lester Sill ofColgems Records heard the track, he felt it needed something extra, and had a brass section overdubbed. The remade "Valleri", released onMarch 2 , 1968, made it to Number Three in the US, but proved to be the band's last top ten hit of the 1960s. (It was also their last single to receive a push from their television series; its followup, "D. W. Washburn ", was not featured on the show, and only reached #19 in the pop charts. Later singles fared even worse.)When Davy Jones,
Micky Dolenz andPeter Tork reunited in 1986 to tour as the Monkees, they featured "Valleri" frequently in their song lineup. The song itself is simple musically; consisting mostly of four chords (F# Major, E Major, D Major and C# Major) repeated several times, with a change midway (from F# Major to D# minor, twice).The original recording of "Valleri" was finally released in January 1990, as part of the
Rhino Records collection "Missing Links, Volume II ", along with several other versions of Monkees tunes used in the TV series.References
* "The Monkees Tale", Eric Lefcowitz (Last Gasp Press) (ISBN 0-86719-338-7)
* "Monkeemania! The True Story of the Monkees", Glenn A. Baker, Tom Czarnota & Peter Hogan (St. Martin's Press) (ISBN 0-312-00003-0)
* [http://musicseek.info/no1hits/1968.htm 1968 singles charts]
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