Rhino treats
the Monkees' catalog with a seriousness akin to
the Beatles' Anthology series, but it's nonsense to pretend that the group's outtakes and rarities are deserving of such fanatical scrutiny. There are a lot more than anyone suspected, though, and
Missing Links, Vol. 3 presents 24 more, again proving that the bottom of
the Monkees' barrel has the same mixture of fun and boredom as hiding in a barrel as a stowaway. There are too many trivial cuts here from the late '60s -- that goes for both the slight pop/rockers and
Nesmith's less slight country-rockers. On the other hand, there are some good 'uns, like the
Dolenz-sung acoustic 1967 demo "She'll Be There," which recalls early British Invasion acts like
Peter & Gordon; different/rare mixes/takes of "Circle Sky" (one of
Nesmith's best compositions),
Jeff Barry's "She Hangs Out," and
Neil Diamond's "Love to Love"; "How Insensitive,"
Nesmith's imaginative country rearrangement of an
Antonio Carlos Jobim (!) standard; and "Merry Go Round" and "Zor and Zam," insanely experimental outings for a teeny bopper group. Thrown into the mix are novelties like commercials and an Italian version of
the Monkees' theme: icing the cake with an inconsistency that makes the nearby presence of a CD remote button a necessity. ~ Richie Unterberger