Of course, he was the Monkee with the stocking cap. But Michael Nesmith was also the Prefab Four's Renaissance man.
Did you know that he helped pioneer country-rock? That he was a godfather of MTV? That he was executive producer of the movie "Repo Man" and is a published novelist?
First and foremost, Nesmith, 70, is a singer/songwriter. That's what he'll demonstrate Friday at the Fitzgerald Theater as part of his first solo tour in more than 20 years.
Don't expect a lot of Monkees songs; maybe just one or two that he wrote for the band. Do expect to hear "Different Drum," the 1967 hit he penned for the Stone Poneys featuring Linda Ronstadt.
"It is in the show but in a very different form than one might expect," Nesmith said in an e-mail interview. "The reactions to it so far have been almost overwhelming. I love the song and the way people have commented and their approval and compliments tell me they love it as well."
It is not a theme for his life, Nesmith insists, merely an observation in general. But he certainly has marched to a different beat.
Although he was able to contribute a couple of songs to nine Monkees albums in the 1960s, he was the most outspoken member about being a puppet. He had to pay to get out of his contract in 1970. Then he started the First National Band, which played a new style that became known as country-rock when the Eagles adopted it.
"It was a natural sequence," Nesmith said. "The songs on that first solo effort had been piling up in the Monkees closet for a while and not released. The producers and controllers of the music for the show did not want them. So when I had the chance I put them together the way I wanted to — with no thought other than just to make them sound good to me and realize the potentials of the songs as best I could."