>From Record Collector No. 201, May 1996, page 158. The Monkees: "Missing Links Vol. 3" (U.S. Import: Rhino R2 72153) (52.00) What makes Rhino's "Missing Links" series better than the Beatles' over-hyped "Anthology"? The fact that the label knows what its audience wants, and delivers. Like its two predecessors, "Missing Links Vol. 3" is a wonderful mix of out-takes, radio jingles and rarities, lifted straight from the 60s master tapes without a hint of 1995 myth-making. There's no after-the-fact jiggery-pokery with the tapes, no attempt to overdub missing Monkees onto what were effectively Nesmith solo sessions, or to add a 90s studio band onto Micky Dolenz's acoustic demos. This is the way the Monkees were, in all their manufactured, multi-tentacled glory. Truth is, each new out-take collection makes the TV terrors sound like a better band. By the time Rhino reach "Missing Links Vol. 10", they'll be bigger than the Beatles. The stylistic varia- tion on this set is remarkable: we already knew that Mike Nesmith was a pioneer of progressive country, but Latin country, as he merges Antonio Carlos Jobim into his vision of cowboy cosmicness? We'd pegged Peter Tork as the Ringo of the group, but where does that leave the Syd- styled weirdness of "Merry Go Round", or the fuzz guitar folk-rock of "Tear The Top Right Off My Head"? How about Micky Dolenz as a seller of Dylanesque talking blues ("Midnight Train")? Or Davy Jones, many Monkees' fans musical bete noire, measuring one part vaudeville to two parts summer pop on the winningly coy "Penny Music"? Nesmith is the star of the proceedings, as you'd expect, previewing his solo career with a slow, bluesy "Little Red Rider", an exquisite dry run through "Propinquity (I've Just Begun To Care)" and an upfront mix of "Circle Sky" from the 'Head' movie. But the Monkees were never a one-man-band - or a bunch of TV comics, though they had that angle covered as well. Other gems on this album include the TV theme sung in Italian; a decent mix, at last, of the Neil Diamond song "Love To Love"; a 1966 alternate take of "Through The Looking Glass"; even a Dolenz R&B showcase backed by the R&B horns of Sam & the Goodtimes, and with the hot- lick king himself, James Burton, on lead guitar. It's almost all previously unreleased, and it's packaged with the care and devotion to detail that you'd expect from a label who have always treated the Monkees as something out of the ordinary. You can keep your '95 remakes of "A Day In The Life" and "Penny Lane"; this is the way archive releases should sound. - Peter Doggett (Record Collector is a magazine printed in the U.K.)