Mickey Jones
“That Would Be Me”
(Rock & Roll Survivor to Hollywood Actor
Life is not remembered in straight lines. As we recollect a time or event in our past, something will remind us of another time and event, which reminds us of another, then another, then we may want to embellish the past with a footnote from the present. So it is, when we are talking with an old friend, that we learn about them and they about us, in a series of reminiscences that we then put together in our minds to form the more complete version of that person. The more we spend time with them, the ore we learn and the deeper the friendship grows until our combines experiences start to merge as we share some portion of our lives together.
“That Would Be Me” (Rock & Roll Survivor to Hollywood Actor) by Mickey Jones reads just like that. I sat down to read this book on a Sunday morning, thinking I might read a chapter of two, then watch my favorite football team on the tube. Instead, I couldn’t put this book down and I finished it later in the day with a few interruptions. Much like shooting the breeze with an old buddy, I was completely drawn into Mickey’s story and found myself looking forward to the next episode in his incredible journey through life.
Not many people could drop as many names from the music and entertainment industry as Mickey does but we quickly learn that he is not name dropping. These were the real deal people who populated his life experience. He was good enough as a rock & roll drummer to be welcomed into the highest levels of performing where he rubbed shoulders with the greats of the day. Names like Trini Lopez, Johnny Rivers, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Kenny Rogers and the First Edition, The Smothers Brothers, Frank Sinatra, Ann-Margret and others, all of them weave in and out of his book to form a historical tapestry of people and places that is remarkable for the reader to imagine. In the process, we begin to feel that we, too, are a friend of Mickey Jones and by extension, perhaps, to the rest of him.
His transition from musician to actor then placed him into another community of names that we recognize right up to the present time. We can watch him in any number of films and television shows, including the very popular series, “Home Improvement”, where he had a recurring role for several years and made famous the line that became the title of this book.
For many years now, Mickey has shown his appreciation for the life he has seen by participating in, and lending his name to charitable benefit affairs all over the country and even in other parts of the world. A world that Mickey Jones was able to see from the high vantage point of his drum set. Oh, by the way, that drum set is now on display in the Hard Rock Café in New York City, part of a tribute to the legendary 1966 World Tour of Bob Dylan and The Band. Yes, Mickey Jones was the drummer on that tour. As great an honor as that was for Mickey, it was just one piece of his fantastic story.
Sometimes the story is fun, sometimes sad and sometimes the reverie takes on a touch of melancholy but it is always interesting and in the end, you may just find yourself a little envious, but Mickey Jones probably wouldn’t want you to envy him. He informs us that he feels blessed by his experiences. Indeed, his wife tells us that she thinks Mickey was born under a lucky star. Once you meet Mickey through his book, you may be feeling a bit lucky yourself.
-------------- Tom Folkes, Media Consultant, San Diego, California, November 26, 2007