| THE DOORS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
The Doors were a popular and influential blues rock
band which formed in Los Angeles, California, United States in 1965.
The band consisted of Jim Morrison (vocals), Ray Manzarek (organ),
Robby Krieger (guitar) and John Densmore (drums). In this
configuration, the band released six albums, all of which were
successful and released two US #1 hit singles - 1967’s “Light My
Fire” and 1968’s “Hello, I Love You”. After Morrison’s death in
1971, the band continued on as a trio, releasing two more albums
that were ignored commercially and disliked critically before
disbanding in 1973
UCLA film school students Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek had known
each other at college and met by chance on Venice beach in July
1965. Morrison told Manzarek he had been writing songs and, at
Manzarek’s encouragement, sang “Moonlight Drive”. Manzarek
immediately suggested they form a band.
Keyboardist Ray Manzarek was already in the band called Rick And The
Ravens with Morrison and his brother Rick Manzarek while Robby
Krieger and John Densmore were playing with The Psychedelic Rangers,
and knew Manzarek from shared meditation instruction. In August
Densmore joined the group and, along with members of the Ravens and
an unidentified female bass player, recorded a six-song demo on
September 2. This was widely bootlegged and appeared in full on the
1997 Doors box set.
That month the group recruited talented guitarist Robby Krieger and
the final lineup—Morrison, Manzarek, Krieger and Densmore—was
complete. Manzarek solved their lack of bassist by playing bass on a
Fender Rhodes bass keyboard with his left hand and keyboards with
his right hand.
The band took their name from the title of a book by Aldous Huxley,
The Doors of Perception, which was in turn borrowed from a line of
poetry by the 18th century artist and poet William Blake: “If the
doors of perception were cleansed, every thing would appear to man
as it is: infinite.”
By 1966 the group was playing The London Fog club and soon graduated
to the prestigious Whisky a Go Go. On August 10 they were spotted by
Elektra Records president Jac Holzman on the insistence of Love
singer Arthur Lee, whose group was on Elektra. On August 18 the
group signed with the label. The timing was immaculate when, on
August 21, the band was fired from the club after a profanity filled
performance of “The End”. In an incident that was a foretelling of
the controversy that would follow the group, a tripping Morrison
bellowed during the “Oedipal” section of the song “Mother…I
want to…fuck you!!!”.
Early recording: 1967–1969
After Jack Holzman and Paul Rothchild saw two sets of the band
playing at Whiskey A Go Go, the first uneven, but the second
mesmerizing, the band was signed to the Elektra Records label
beginning a long and successful partnership with producer Paul
Rothchild and engineer Bruce Botnick. Their self-titled debut LP
featured most of the major songs from their set, including the
eleven-minute musical drama, “The End”. With the band at the peak of
their form and bristling with energy and ambition, the album was
recorded in only a few days, in late August and early September
1966, almost entirely live in the studio, with most songs captured
in a single take. Morrison and Manzarek also directed an innovative
promotional film for the single “Break on Through”, which was an
important stepping stone in the development of the music video
genre.
Released in January 1967, the album caused a sensation in music
circles and the second single released from it, “Light My Fire”,
became a major hit, establishing the group alongside Jefferson
Airplane and The Grateful Dead as one of the top new American bands
of 1967. It was released in April but did not hit the top, with the
long middle solo cut out, until July. In September the group played
the song live on the popular Ed Sullivan Show where Morrison sang
the word “higher”, despite being asked not to by the CBS Network.
They also performed a new single “People Are Strange” which they
repeated for DJ Murray The K’s TV show on September 22. Earlier in
the month the group recorded a dazzling version of “The End” for CBS
in Toronto. It remained unreleased until the release of The Doors
Soundstage Performances DVD.
With his saturnine good looks, magnetic stage presence and
skin-tight leather trousers, Morrison quickly became one of the
major pop sex symbols of his day, although he soon became frustrated
with the strictures of stardom.
The second Doors LP, Strange Days, was almost as strong as the first,
and it cemented the group’s reputation. More subdued and less
spontaneous than the debut, the album is notable for its evocative
lyricism and atmosphere. Closing track “When The Music’s Over” was
again, like “The End” lengthy and dramatic and helped establish
Morrison’s reputation as the wild shaman of rock. Yet the album was
also strongly commercial and featured well-known Doors songs, “Love
Me Two Times” and “Moonlight Drive”.
Morrison’s status as a figure of rebellion was further cemented on
December 9 when he was arrested in New Haven, Connecticut for
badmouthing the police to the audience from the stage. Morrison said
he had been maced by an overzealous cop after he was caught
backstage with a girl. The group finished a successful year on
December 27 by taping “Light My Fire” and “Moonlight Drive” for the
Jonathan Winters Show. From December 26 to 28 the group played at
The Winterland San Francisco and then two dates in Denver on
December 30 and 31, capping off a year of almost constant touring.
As a result of their success, The Doors forfeited their status as
underground heroes. They allowed Sixteen magazine to portray them as
teen idols and their “spontaneous” stage-show was exposed as
not-so-spontaneous after all. An article by Jerry Hopkins in the
February 10, 1968 edition of Rolling Stone typified the fall from
grace:
“One shtick, or piece of stage-business, missing at the Shrine
performance, was Morrison’s carefully-executed ‘accidental’ fall
from the stage into the crowd. For months this had been a part of
the act. It got a lot of screams from the teenyboppers. Then a
review appeared in a local newspaper which called the fall one of
the phoniest things ever. Morrison was asked if he’d read the
article. ‘Yeah,’ said Morrison, ‘and I guess he’s right.’ Morrison
did not take the fall that night at the Shrine.”
Fraught sessions for the group’s third album took place in April as
Morrison became increasingly dependent on alcohol. Approaching the
height of their popularity The Doors played a series of outdoor
shows which led to frenzied scenes between fans and police,
particularly at Chicago Coliseum on May 10.
Their third LP, Waiting for the Sun, (1968) showed the band
beginning to branch out from their initial form, as they exhausted
their original repertoire and began writing new material. It became
their first #1 LP and the single “Hello, I Love You” was their
second and last US #1 single. The album is eclectic in style,
sometimes inconsequential, and much less unified than the first two,
despite containing some fine material. It further isolated them from
the underground cognoscenti. As Lilian Roxon described it in her
1969 Rock Encyclopaedia, the album “strengthened dreadful suspicion
that the Doors were in it just for the money”. It also included the
song “The Unknown Soldier”, for which they created another
self-directed music video, and “Not to Touch the Earth”, excerpted
from their legendary thirty-minute concept piece Celebration of the
Lizard, although they were reportedly unable to record a
satisfactory version of the entire piece for the LP. This was
eventually released on a later greatest hits CD compilation.
A month after riotous scenes at the Singer Bowl, New York the group
flew for their first dates outside of North America, to England. The
group held a press conference at the ICA Gallery, London and played
shows at The Roundhouse Theatre. The results of the trip were
broadcast on Granada TV’s “The Doors Are Open” and were later
released on video. The group then played dates in Europe including a
show in Amsterdam without Morrison after he collapsed from a drug
binge. Morrison returned to London on September 20 and stayed for a
month.
The group played nine more US dates and got to work in November on
their fourth LP. 1969 would be a very difficult year for the group
but it started well with a sold out show at the prestigious Madison
Square Garden, New York on January 24 and with the success of new
single “Touch Me” (released in December 1968), which hit US #3.
That month Morrison attended a theatre production which changed the
course of his and the group’s life. At the University of Southern
California’s Bovard Auditorium The Living Theatre took to the stage
for a highly charged show which urged people to cast aside their
inhibitions to freedom.
The show appealed to Morrison’s quest for personal freedom, the
results of which can be heard the next evening, February 25, during
a studio jam which became the legendary “Rock Is Dead” session,
later released on the 1997 Doors box set. The stage had been set for
the most controversial episode of Morrison’s life and one of the
most notorious rock stories.
To fans of The Doors, the music included socially, psychologically
and politically charged lyrics mostly written by ‘The Lizard King’,
Jim Morrison. The jazz drumming of John Densmore, the swirling
keyboards of Ray Manzarek, whose left hand played the parts
typically associated with bass guitar, and Robby Krieger’s guitar
playing, which showed the influence of flamenco, Indian, the blues
and classical music, combined to form a distinctive sound. The Doors
were unusual among rock groups in that they did not use a bass
guitarist in concert, with Manzarek playing the bass lines on a
Fender electric keyboard bass, an offshoot of the well-known Fender
Rhodes electric piano. However, the group utilized bass players such
as Jerry Scheff, Doug Lubahn, Harvey Brooks, Kerry Magness, Lonnie
Mack and Ray Neapolitan on their albums.
Many of The Doors’ originals were composed communally, with Morrison
usually contributing the lyrics and some melody, while the others
hammered out the beat and flow of the song. While Morrison and
Manzarek were walking on the beach in California, they passed an
African-American girl, and Morrison wrote the lyrics to Hello I Love
You in a single night, referring to the girl as the “dusky jewel”.
The song received some criticism at the time for its resemblance to
The Kinks’ 1965 hit “All Day and All of the Night”. Ray Davies, lead
singer of the Kinks, sued the Doors for stealing the rhythm of “All
Day and All of the Night”.
[edit]
Mid career controversy: 1969–1971
The Doors quickly earned a reputation as a challenging and
entertaining live act, as well as having a rebellious reputation.
Jim Morrison was arrested on stage in New Haven for foul language
which he had directed toward police at the concert. In one
appearance on September 17, 1967 with a live performance on the Ed
Sullivan Show on the Columbia Broadcasting System network, the
network’s censors demanded the group change its lyrics in its song,
Light My Fire, altering the line, “Girl, we couldn’t get much higher”
because of the reference to drugs. However, Morrison sang the
original line instead, and on live television with no delay CBS was
powerless to stop it. Ed Sullivan was so furious that he refused to
shake their hands and they were never invited back. Morrison later
insisted he was nervous during the performance and forgot to change
the line. (They weren’t the only ones banned from the show. Eleven
years earlier, Bo Diddley was banned from appearing on the show when
he refused to sing Sixteen Tons.)
The most infamous incident occurred at the March 1, 1969 Dinner Key
Auditorium concert in Miami, Florida. Morrison allegedly exposed
himself during the performance. Morrison had been drinking since
missing his flight to the show. The 6,900 seat auditorium had been
oversold by almost double the hall’s capacity and fans were
sweltering without air conditioning. From the moment the band walked
on stage Morrison started bellowing into the microphone:
“Now listen here, I ain’t talking ‘bout no revolution and I’m not
talkin’ about no demonstrations.
“I’m talking about having a good time, I’m talking about having a
good time this summer. And you all come out to L.A., you all get out
there, we’re gonna lie down there in the sand and rub our toes in
the ocean, and we’re gonna have a good time, are you ready, are you
ready, are you ready, are you ready, are you ready, are you ready,
are you ready, are you ready?
“Now listen! I used to think the whole thing was a big joke. I used
to think it was something to laugh about. And then the last couple
of nights I met some people who were doing somethin’! They’re tryin’
to change the world! And I wanna get on that trip! I wanna change
the world. Wanna change it. Yeeeeeeaaaaaahhh - change it.”
Within a few minutes Morrison had changed his tune:
“Now listen, I’m not talkin’ about no revolution, an’ I’m not
talkin’ about no demonstration! I’m talkin’ about having fun! I’m
talkin’ about dancin’! I wanna see you people get up and dance! I
wanna see you people dancin’ in the street this summer! I wanna see
you have some fun. I wanna see you run around. I wanna see you paint
the town. I wanna see you ringin’ out. I wanna see you shout. I
wanna see some fun. I wanna see some fun from everyone.”
The recording nears its end with the ominous words:
“ANYTHING YOU WANT! LET’S DO IT! LET’S DO IT! LET’S DO IT!”
The incident remains inconclusive. Morrison said: “I wasted a lot of
time with the Miami trial. About a year and a half. But I guess it
was a valuable experience because before the trial I had a very
unrealistic schoolboy attitude about the American judicial system.
My eyes have been opened up a bit.”
While Morrison as the lead singer received the most attention of the
group, as well as getting a far larger image of himself on album
covers, he was quite adamant about all the members of the group
getting recognition. Before one concert when the announcer
introduced the group as “Jim Morrison and The Doors”, Morrison in a
rage refused to appear unless he announced the group again, solely
as “The Doors”. While he never felt close to his real life family,
he was extremely protective of the rest of the members of The Doors.
Reportedly, he once told Ray Manzarek that he never felt comfortable
in a social setting unless Ray or another member of the band were
with him. Many people have since come to the conclusion that he
viewed The Doors as his surrogate family. This may be attributed the
fact that he not only repeatedly turned down every solo album
opportunity he was ever offered, but that the remaining members of
The Doors refused to replace him as the singer of the band after his
death.
Although the band’s reputation was damaged Morrison was quietly
relieved by the results of the Miami incident. He later said: “I
think I was just fed up with the image that had been created around
me… and so I put an end to it in one glorious evening”.
Released from the chain of touring Morrison recorded some of his
poetry that month and, in April, began shooting footage for HWY, an
experimental film about a hitchiker, played by Morrison. The poetry
session was used for the 1978 album An American Prayer where it was
set to new music by The Doors. HWY, which contains virtually no
dialogue, circulates among collectors although an official release
has been rumored.
In the last two years of his life Morrison curtailed his former
prodigious intake of psychedelic drugs and began drinking heavily,
which in turn soon began to affect his performance, both on stage
and in the studio. Apparently trying to escape the image of “The
Lizard King” that had come to dominate him, Morrison put on weight
and grew a thick beard, forcing Elektra to use photos taken earlier
in his career for the cover of their Absolutely Live LP, released in
1970. The album features performances recorded on their 1970
American tour and at the 1969 Aquarius Theatre gig and includes a
full-length live performance of “The Celebration of the Lizard”.
The group’s only public appearance was on a PBS television special,
recorded late in April and broadcast the following month. Here the
group performed songs from the upcoming Soft Parade album, including
a stunning version of the title track.
The group resumed touring at Chicago Auditorium Theater on June 14
and proceeded to play two dates at The Aquarius Theatre, Hollywood
on July 21 and 22, both later released on CD. The shows were typical
of a new kind of Doors concert where the emphasis was more on the
band and fans having a good time than having a shamanistic
experience. The bearded Morrison wore loose fitting clothes and
steered the bands towards a bluesier direction with songs like
“Build Me A Woman”, “I Will Never Be Untrue” and “Who Do You Love”.
Yet his voice had lost none of its power and the band could still
dazzle with performances of “When The Music’s Over” and “Celebration
of the Lizard”.
Their fourth album, The Soft Parade (1969), released in July,
further distanced the group from the “underground”, containing
extremely pop-oriented arrangements, complete with “Vegas-style”
horn sections (their single, “Touch Me,” featured saxophonist Curtis
Amy).
Morrison’s excessive drinking made him increasingly difficult and
unreliable in the studio, and the sessions for the record dragged on
for weeks (where they had formerly taken days). Studio costs piled
up, and the group came close to disintegrating.
Critics of the record see the band as struggling to maintain
momentum and attempting to expand their sound with a horn section
and strings, resulting in a weak record suffering from bloated
overproduction.
In its defense, The Soft Parade stands as an experiment that
succeeded despite Morrison’s erratic behavior and numerous technical
challenges. In the context of the group’s established repertoire,
the record finds them exploring a new “quasi-prog-pop” direction.
The more commercially-oriented songs such as “Touch Me” and “Tell
All The People” are memorable; tracks such as “Wild Child” and
“Shaman’s Blues” are as stripped down and imaginitive as ever, with
particularly excellent guitar and lyrics.
Amid the recording of their next album, in November 1969, Morrison
found himself in trouble with the law again after becoming drunk and
abusive to airline staff during a flight to Phoenix, Arizona to see
The Rolling Stones in concert. He was acquitted the following April
after a steward mistakenly identified Morrison as his traveling
companion, American actor Tom Baker (Not the Tom Baker who played
Dr. Who.)
The group started its year in New York again, this time over two
nights at The Felt Forum. The two nights were well received.
The group staged a strong return to form with their excellent 1970
LP Morrison Hotel. Featuring a consistent, hard rock sound the album
contains the memorable opener “Roadhouse Blues”, which typified the
high-spirited assuredness of the entire album. Morrison Hotel had a
buoyancy and optimism that the band had never had before with a host
of celebratory songs and a couple of lovely ballads. It hit US #4.
The group continued to perform at arenas throughout the summer and
Morrison faced trial in Miami in August. The group managed to make
it to The Isle of Wight on August 29th where a tired Morrison
performed what was considered a below-par set. Songs from the show
show up in 1995 on the Message To Love documentary.
On September 16th, Morrison took to the stand but it was in vain,
the jury returning a guilty verdict for profanity and indecent
exposure on September 20. Morrison was sentenced to eight months
custody but was allowed to go free pending an appeal.
On December 8th, 1970, Morrison recorded another poetry session, on
his 27th birthday.
The Doors last public performance was at the “Warehouse” in New
Orleans, LA on Dec. 12th, 1970, where it appeared Morrison had a
mental breakdown on stage (slamming the microphone numerous times
into the stage floor).
The group looked set to regain their crown as one of America’s
premier acts with the superb L.A. Woman in 1971. It was conceived as
a “back to basics” album which would explore their blues and R&B
roots, although during rehearsals the group had a serious
falling-out with Rothchild. Denouncing the new repertoire as
“cocktail music”, he quit and handed the production reins to Botnick.
The result was widely considered a classic, featuring some of the
strongest material and performances since their 1967 debut. Some
dissenters, however, consider nearly half the album to be lackluster
blues material, detracting severely from the album’s overall quality.
The atmospheric single “Riders On The Storm” became a mainstay of
rock radio programming for decades.
Aftermath of Morrison’s death: 1971–1989
In 1971, following the recording of L.A. Woman, Morrison decided to
take some time out and moved to Paris with girlfriend Pamela Courson,
in March. He had visited the previous summer and, for a time, seemed
contented to write and explore the city. But by June he was once
again drinking heavily and suffered a fall from a second story
window in May. On June 16 the last known recording of Morrison was
made when he befriended two street musicians at a bar and invited
them to a recording studio. The drunken results were later released
on bootleg CD.
Morrison died under mysterious circumstances on 3 July 1971; his
body was found in the bathtub of his apartment. It was concluded
that he died of a heart attack, although it was later revealed that
no autopsy had been performed before Morrison’s body was buried at
the Père-Lachaise Cemetery on July 7.
Rumours persisted for many years that Morrison had faked his death
to escape the spotlight, as did the rumour that Morrison had
actually died at a Paris nightclub and that his body had been
surreptitiously taken back to his apartment. However, in his book
Wonderland Avenue, Morrison’s former associate Danny Sugerman states
that during his last meeting with Courson, which took place shortly
before she died of a heroin overdose, she confessed to Sugerman that
she had introduced Morrison to the drug and that, because he had a
fear of needles, she had injected him with the dose that killed him.
The remaining Doors continued for some time. After initially
considering replacing Morrison with a new singer, Krieger and
Manzarek took over on vocals, and released two more albums, Other
Voices and Full Circle. The Doors also toured during this time.
Both albums sold well, but not in the numbers of the Morrison era
releases, and the Doors ceased all performing and recording
activities at the end of 1972. While the first is unmistakably Doors
in sound and style, the last album showed the Doors further
expanding into jazz territory. While neither album have yet seen CD
reissues in the U.S., they have been released on 2-on-1 CDs in
Germany and Russian Federation and are being heard via internet P2P
networks and are undergoing fan reevaluation.
The remaining Doors recorded a third post-Morrison album, An
American Prayer released in 1978, this time providing only backup
music to recordings of Morrison’s poetry.
In 1979 Francis Ford Coppola released Apocalypse Now with “The End”
used prominently in the sound track. With this, “The Doors” were
rediscovered by new fans. In 1983, “Alive, She Cried” was released,
which included a cover version of the Them hit “Gloria”, adding it
officially to the Elektra Records discography.
The 1990s and beyond
In 1991, director Oliver Stone released his film The Doors, starring
Val Kilmer as Morrison and with cameos by Krieger and Densmore. Ian
Astbury of The Cult was Stone’s preferred choice, but Astbury
decided not to enter the acting world for reasons unknown. While all
were amazed at Kilmer’s impersonation, the film had numerous factual
inaccuracies and members of the group later voiced displeasure at
Stone’s portrayal of Morrison, at times making him look like an
out-of-control sociopath.
In 2002 Manzarek and Krieger reunited and created a new version of
The Doors, called “The Doors of the 21st Century”. In the place of
Morrison, the new lineup was fronted by British vocalist Ian Astbury,
former lead singer of UK band The Cult, with Angelo Barbera from
Krieger’s band on bass. At their first concert the group announced
that drummer John Densmore would not perform, and it was later
reported that he was unable to play because he suffered from
tinnitus. Densmore was initially replaced by Stewart Copeland,
formerly of The Police, but after Copeland broke his arm falling off
a bicycle, the arrangement ended in mutual lawsuits and he was
replaced by Ty Dennis, drummer with Krieger’s band.
Densmore subsequently claimed that he had in fact not been invited
to take part in the reunion. In February 2003 he filed an injunction
against his former bandmates hoping to prevent them from using the
name “The Doors of the 21st Century”. His motion was denied in court
in May that year, although Manzarek publicly reiterated that the
invitation for Densmore to return to the group still stood. It was
also reported that both Morrison’s family and that of Pamela Courson
had joined Densmore in seeking to prevent Manzarek and Krieger from
using The Doors’ name. In July 2005, Densmore and the Morrison
estate won a permanent injunction; thereby preventing his former
bandmates from using The Doors’ name. The new band initially
switched to the name “D21C” and now plays under the name Riders on
the storm, which is itself the name of a Doors tribute band in the
northeastern US. They are allowed to play under names such as
“former Doors” and “members of The Doors”. Densmore has also been
steadfast in refusing to license The Doors’ music for use in
television commercials, including an offer of $15 million by
Cadillac to lease the song “Break on Through (to the Other Side)”,
feeling that that would be in violation of the spirit in which the
music was created. Densmore wrote about this subject for The Nation,
noting,
People lost their virginity to this music, got high for the first
time to this music. I’ve had people say kids died in Viet Nam
listening to this music, other people say they know someone who
didn’t commit suicide because of this music…. On stage, when we
played these songs, they felt mysterious and magic. That’s not for
rent.
Manzarek and Krieger maintain that touring as a Doors revival and
licensing the music to advertisements are a means to keep The Doors
from fading into history. Manzarek was quoted as saying, “We’re all
getting older. We should, the three of us, be playing these songs
because, hey, the end is always near. Morrison was a poet, and above
all, a poet wants his words heard.”
The Doors are remembered for shamanistic live performances. Some
members of the “establishment”, however, felt that they were merely
American rock music rebels. Jim Morrison said: “I like any reaction
I can get with my music. Just anything to get people to think. I
mean if you can get a whole room full of drunk, stoned people to
actually wake up and think, you’re doing something.”
Their enduring popularity is reflected by continuing sales of their
early work.
Recorded output
The Doors left a reasonably concise discography for an era dominated
by groups which seemed to rush out an album every six months and a
high number of non-album singles. The first, self-titled album is
generally thought to be the strongest and is a regular sight in
greatest 100 album lists. Strange Days, Morrison Hotel and L.A Woman
are all highly rated by fans and, due to their different styles, (psychedelic
pop, hard rock, blues) appeal to some more than others. Waiting For
The Sun contains some strong tracks but is thematically weak. The
Soft Parade is considered by some to be “plain bad and for fans only”.
1970’s Absolutely Live and 1983’s Alive She Cried are good examples
of the band’s live show and are available on CD. The 2CD In Concert
is better value for money as it collects the two and adds an
interesting version of “The End” from the Hollywood Bowl show in
1968.
Only three non-album tracks were released in the band’s lifetime,
the b-sides “Who Scared You”, “Tree Trunk”, and a cover of Willie
Dixon’s “(You Need Meat) Don’t Go Further” sung by Ray. “Who Scared
You” and “(You Need Meat) Don’t Go Further” appeared on the 1972
compilation Weird Scenes Inside The Goldmine while only “Who Scared
You” has since been given a further CD release, on the 1997 box set.
In 1978 the surviving Doors re-united to add music to poetry
recorded by Morrison in 1969 and 1970. The resulting album was “An
American Prayer” and was re-issued on CD in 1995 with bonus tracks
“Hour For Magic”, “Freedom Exists”, “A Feast Of Friends”, “Babylon
Fading”, “Bird Of Prey” and “The Ghost Song (extended version)”.
The group had always shied away from releasing archive Doors
material but in 1997 relented with the release of The Doors box set.
While hardcore fans complained that most of the material had been
previously released on bootlegs the 4CD set, one of which was a
“greatest hits” type CD, proved popular. It was notable for a CD of
highlights from the 1970 Felt Forum concert and a cleaned-up
recording of the (edited) 1969 “Rock Is Dead” session. The surviving
members again re-united to add new musical backing to the solo
Morrison song “Orange County Suite”.
In November 2000 came the announcement many fans had dreamed of when
The Doors announced the creation of Bright Midnight Records, a label
through which 36 albums and 90 hours of previously unreleased
Morrison-era Doors material would be made available on CD. This was
launched with a sampler of forthcoming material, mostly from live
concerts. The first full release was a 2CD set of the May 1970 show
at Detroit Cobo Arena. It was followed by two CDs of interviews,
mostly with Morrison, and the two 1969 Aquarius shows and one of the
rehearsals. A 4CD set “Boot Yer Butt” unashamedly used bootleg
quality material but sold out nevertheless. It was notable for the
inclusion of the only known performances of songs from L.A Woman
including the title track and “The Changeling” from The Doors’ last
but one show, in December 1970, Dallas, Texas. In 2005 a 2CD concert
from Philadelphia in 1970 was released.
Many illegal bootleg recordings are available of the group. Most
impressive is a wealth of shows from March 1967 at the legendary
Matrix Club in San Francisco. Many shows are available from 1968
when the band reached the height of its popularity, notably two
shows in Stockholm, Sweden. The infamous Miami show has become
widely available while many 1970 shows, notably a radio broadcast of
the June 6 Vancouver show, make the rounds. The complete 1969 “Rock
Is Dead” studio jam was discovered in the mid 1990s.
Recently, a commercial for Star Motorcycles featuring the Doors song
“Riders on the Storm” has been seen. |