The Monkees are debating another reunion tour just two months after their latest get together fell flat.
Three of the four original members of the 1960s group put aside a decade of acrimony and toured in support of their 45th anniversary this summer, but the reunion mysteriously came to a halt in August after more than 40 shows.
Guitarist Peter Tork is still refusing to reveal why the tour broke down, but insists there are already plans afoot to start again.
He tells RollingStone.com, "I'm not really at liberty to get into detail about what happened, but there were some business affairs that couldn't be coordinated correctly.
"We hit a glitch and there was just this weird dislocation at one point. I can't say anything more without getting into the stuff that we have to keep down. We need to work on this stuff outside of the public eye.
"(But) between everybody's behaviour changing enough and restructuring the way that we related to one another... we did it all right. We had a good time onstage, laughed and created jokes."
The positive reviews and sell-out crowds on the British leg of the tour have prompted Tork, Davy Jones and Micky Dolenz to consider getting back on the road once the "business affairs" are sorted out.
Tork adds, "I'd say that the odds of another tour are better than 50/50... it would probably be in the next year or two. But obviously nothing is settled yet, and until we see a settlement in sight, we can't even begin to arrange a tour.
"Once you start arranging a tour, you may be able to get it mounted about six or seven months down the road."