Good Times! (10th Anniversary Deluxe) (Limited)
Monkees
CD1
- Good Times
- You Bring The Summer
- She Makes Me Laugh
- Our Own World
- Gotta Give It Time
- Me & Magdalena
- Whatever’s Right
- Love To Love
- Little Girl
- Birth Of An Accidental Hipster
- Wasn’t Born To Follow
- I Know What I Know
- I Was There (And I’m Told I Had A Good Time)
CD2 BONUS TRACKS
- Terrifying
- Me & Magdalena (Version 2)
- A Better World
- Love’s What I Want
- Good Times (Instrumentals)
- You Bring The Summer (Instrumentals)
- She Makes Me Laugh (Instrumentals)
- Our Own World (Instrumentals)
- Gotta Give It Time (Instrumentals)
- Me & Magdalena (Instrumentals)
- Whatever’s Right (Instrumentals)
- Love To Love (Instrumentals)
- Little Girl (Instrumentals)
- Birth Of An Accidental Hipster (Instrumentals)
- Wasn’t Born To Follow (Instrumentals)
- I Know What I Know (Instrumentals)
- I Was There (And I’m Told I Had A Good Time) (Instrumentals)
To help celebrate the Monkees 60th Anniversary, Rhino is releasing Good Times! (10th Anniversary Deluxe Edition), a new 2CD version of the band’s acclaimed 2016 studio album. The set arrives today and includes unreleased instrumental versions of every album track, plus four rare session outtakes. The album will also be made available digitally for the first time. The collection joins the growing list of Rhino’s special releases honoring The Monkees’ diamond anniversary, with more to come soon.
Also out today, an audiophile vinyl edition of the original album will be released through the Rhino Reserve series. The 180-gram pressing was cut from the original analog masters by Matthew Lutthans at The Mastering Lab and pressed at Fidelity Record Pressing in Oxnard, California. The LP will be available exclusively through indie retailers in the U.S. and via Rhino.
Micky Dolenz is currently celebrating The Monkees’ 60th anniversary on his “60 Years of The Monkees” tour, a 27-date run through the U.S. that headlines a year-long celebration of the band’s enduring legacy.
“Working on Good Times! was an extraordinary experience. None of us could have imagined that nearly 50 years after our last Top 20 record, we’d be back there again with a new Monkees album. That meant a lot. It was also a joy to work with the incredibly talented Adam Schlesinger, who understood exactly how to honor our history while still making something fresh. Mike, Peter, and I had a wonderful time making that record, and I have no doubt Davy’s spirit was right there with us. We really did have a good time.” - Micky Dolenz
A decade after its debut, Good Times! stands as a late-career triumph for The Monkees, both critically and commercially. It debuted at #14 on the Billboard 200—the group’s highest-charting studio effort in 48 years—and earned widespread acclaim. Rolling Stone noted at the time: “Monkees freaks have waited far too long for this album. But it was worth it.”
To record the album, Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork teamed with producer Adam Schlesinger to follow the same collaborative blueprint that defined the band’s early albums. Like those, Good Times! features tracks written specifically for the group by some of the world’s best songwriters, including Rivers Cuomo (Weezer), Ben Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie), Andy Partridge (XTC), Noel Gallagher (Oasis), and Paul Weller (The Jam). Nesmith and Tork also wrote songs for the new album: “I Know What I Know” and “A Better World” respectively.
The group also went back to the 1960s for a trio of demos, updating those vintage recordings with new performances. These included the Carole King and Gerry Goffin-penned “Wasn’t Born To Follow,” featuring a 1968 backing performance by the legendary Wrecking Crew. Additionally, the Neil Diamond-penned “Love To Love” was built around a vocal by the late Davy Jones, while the Harry Nilsson-written title track was transformed into a duet, pairing Nilsson’s original 1968 vocal and piano with a new performance by Dolenz.
The 10th anniversary edition of Good Times! honors a legacy that began with one of the most successful runs in music history. Between 1966 and 1967, The Monkees sold more than 16 million albums and established a Billboard chart record by becoming the first and only group to have four #1 albums in a single calendar year (1967). During that peak, the group’s first two albums held the #1 spot for a combined 31 weeks, cementing Monkeemania as a definitive force in American pop culture.