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Music Icon's Legacy Lives On: Bobby Hart, Monkees Hitmaker, Dies at 86

Published 2 hours ago4 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
Music Icon's Legacy Lives On: Bobby Hart, Monkees Hitmaker, Dies at 86

Bobby Hart, a pivotal figure in the creation of The Monkees' distinctive sound and multimedia success, passed away at his Los Angeles home at the age of 86. Hart, whose health had declined since a hip injury last year, was renowned for his songwriting partnership with Tommy Boyce, yielding numerous hits including "Last Train to Clarksville" and "I'm Not Your Steppin' Stone."

Boyce and Hart formed an exceptionally productive and successful songwriting team in the mid-1960s, particularly for The Monkees, the television-formed group championed by music executive Don Kirshner. Their iconic contributions include The Monkees' memorable theme song, featuring the lines "Here we come, walkin' down the street" and the enduring chant "Hey, hey, we’re the Monkees." They also penned the group's first No. 1 hit, "Last Train to Clarksville." The Monkees' self-titled, million-selling debut album prominently featured six songs by Boyce and Hart, who not only wrote but also produced these tracks, utilizing their own backing band, the Candy Store Prophets, as session musicians. Micky Dolenz of The Monkees lauded their influence, stating in Hart’s 2015 memoir, Psychedelic Bubblegum, that they were "instrumental in creating the unique Monkee sound we all know and love."

As their fame grew and The Monkees sought greater creative control, Boyce and Hart embarked on their own performing careers. They released albums such as Test Patterns and I Wonder What She's Doing Tonite, and made appearances on popular sitcoms like I Dream of Jeannie and Bewitched. Beyond music, they were politically engaged, campaigning for Robert F. Kennedy's presidential bid in 1968 and composing the spirited song "L.U.V. (Let Us Vote)" in support of the 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18 in 1971. Their songwriting repertoire also extended to The Monkees' melancholic "I Wanna Be Free" and the enduring theme for the daytime soap opera Days of Our Lives. Their compositions were widely covered by diverse artists, ranging from Dean Martin to the Sex Pistols.

In the 1970s and '80s, Hart continued to achieve success with other collaborators. He contributed material to another television musical act, The Partridge Family, and co-wrote "Over You" with Austin Roberts, an Oscar-nominated ballad performed by Betty Buckley in the film "Tender Mercies." With Dick Eastman, he co-wrote "My Secret (Didja Gitit Yet?)" for New Edition. He later toured alongside Dolenz and fellow Monkee Davy Jones in the 1970s, resulting in the album Dolenz, Jones, Boyce & Hart. The Monkees' resurgence in the 1980s brought renewed attention to their earlier work. Boyce, who passed away in 1994, and Hart were the subjects of the 2014 documentary The Guys Who Wrote 'Em.

Born Robert Luke Harshman in Phoenix, Arizona, the minister's son recalled himself as a shy child with a strong desire to make his mark, as detailed in his memoir. Music provided that avenue, and by high school, he had mastered the piano, guitar, and Hammond B-3 organ, even establishing his own amateur radio station. After high school and a stint in the Army reserves, Hart moved to Los Angeles in the late 1950s. Initially aspiring to be a disc jockey, he soon found his calling as a songwriter and session musician. Shortening his name to Bobby Hart, he toured with Teddy Randazzo and the Dazzlers and, with Randazzo and Bobby Weinstein, co-wrote "Hurt So Bad," a hit for Little Anthony and the Imperials later covered by Linda Ronstadt. It was during this period that he befriended Tommy Boyce, a singer and songwriter from Charlottesville, Virginia, known for his "unusual personality, spontaneous and extroverted, yet very cool."

The duo quickly demonstrated their songwriting prowess, penning the top 10 hit "Come a Little Bit Closer" for Jay and the Americans. Their combined talent was so evident that Don Kirshner recruited them for his Screen Gems songwriting factory, specifically assigning them to craft songs for The Monkees. Tasked with creating tunes for a band openly modeled after The Beatles, they developed a twangy guitar line reminiscent of "Paperback Writer," which became the foundation for their 1966 chart-topper "Last Train to Clarksville." When Kirshner requested a song featuring a girl's name, they delivered "Valleri," a top 5 hit. The creation of The Monkees' theme song was similarly spontaneous; Hart recounted in his memoir how Boyce's guitar strumming and Hart's own finger snapping and mouth noises, simulating a hi-hat cymbal, led them to sing about their immediate action: "Walkin' down the street." Hart was married twice, most recently to singer Mary Ann Hart, and had two children from his first marriage.

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