The lizard king is lifeless, lengthy dwell The Doorways. It’s August 1971, barely a month after Jim Morrison was discovered lifeless in a tub in Paris, and his surviving bandmates in The Doorways are placing the ending touches to their first album with out him. You may politely name this an act of professionalism. In much less charitable phrases it might simply seem plain chilly.
Unbelievable because it may appear, at the moment there hadn’t been a complete lot of debate about whether or not or to not stick with it. “Of all of the mysteries surrounding The Doorways, the one which possibly confounds individuals probably the most is why we thought we might nonetheless be a band after Jim died,” guitarist Robby Krieger wrote in his 2021 memoir Set The Evening On Fireplace. “It appears so ridiculous now, however there was some logic to it.”
To be truthful, there was greater than a bit of logic to it. Krieger, keyboard participant Ray Manzarek and dummer John Densmore had been writing and making ready songs for the subsequent Doorways album, whereas Morrison vacationed in Paris. In keeping with Manzarek, Morrison had even rehearsed various new Doorways songs previous to leaving for France. His non-return wasn’t considered as fairly the creative disaster it appeared. “On the time it made sense to write down songs,” Krieger reasoned. “It made sense to report. Our label was behind us all the best way…Why not preserve it going?”
Looking back, the trio conceded that they need to’ve allowed a interval of mourning. However, as Densmore rationalised in his personal biography Riders On The Storm: “We had been so fired as much as go on earlier than Jim checked out that we didn’t actually acknowledge his loss of life and grieve.”
The instant fruit of their labour was the album Different Voices. Not one of the band severely entertained the thought of discovering a alternative for Morrison, so that they determined amongst themselves that Manzarek and Krieger would share lead vocals. Manzarek at the very least had kind on this division, having sung in pre-Doorways outfit Rick & The Ravens. The remainder of the set-up was just about enterprise as normal. Common producer Bruce Botnick was on the controls, and recording came about within the acquainted surrounds of The Doorways Workshop, web site of the L.A. Lady classes, in Hollywood.
However the large Morrison-sized gap, Different Voices’ different main distinction was its staff of bassists. Jerry Scheff returned from L.A. Lady, however shared the bass enjoying with Jack Conrad, Wolfgang Melz and Ray Neapolitan. The songs, at finest, had been serviceable. At worst, The Doorways gave the impression of a workaday bar band.
Krieger’s Selection Is The Spice Of Life, for instance, shortly lapses into deadweight boogie, hardly enlivened by trite lyrics: ‘All these fairly ladies with nothing to do/C’mon and assist me attempt to discover one thing new.’ I’m Sexy, I’m Stoned sounds simply as dangerous as its title suggests; Down On The Farm – supposedly rejected by Morrison through the L.A. Lady classes – can’t appear to determine whether or not it desires to be Canned Warmth or a rustic pastiche.
There are some worthy moments, nonetheless. Tightrope Journey rattles alongside like prime Stones. Lyrically it feels aimed instantly on the band’s departed frontman, performing as each tribute and cautionary story. There are allusions to isolation, insanity and courting hazard, whereas the ultimate verse attracts comparability to a different doomed younger soul: ‘We’re by your aspect, however you’re on their lonesome/ Like a Rolling Stone, like Brian Jones.’
Dangle On To Your Life finds The Doorways finding their basic groove, underpinned by Melz’s sprightly funk bass line. The monitor accelerates, finally racing headlong right into a manic jam. The epic Ships With Sails is equally putting, not least for an prolonged instrumental passage that finds the trio actually impressed, negotiating folk-rock and jazz, and topped by a fantastic, open-ended Manzarek solo. It’s telling that Different Voices’ selection moments are usually with out vocals.
Launched in late October ’71, the album couldn’t compete with its platinum-shifting predecessors, however peaked, pretty respectably, simply exterior the Billboard High 30. Elektra Data boss Jac Holzman introduced gross sales of 300,000, which, bolstered by a profitable US tour that included sell-out dates at Carnegie Corridor and Hollywood Palladium, was sufficient to warrant extra studio time.
“[Jac] wasn’t naïve sufficient to suppose a Morrison-less Doorways album would break any gross sales data, however he stood by us like he all the time had,” famous Krieger. “His timeless assist was, for higher or worse, one of many huge causes we needed to the heart to press ahead.”
For higher or worse, certainly. The trio wasted no time in recording a follow-up. This time The Doorways opted to provide the album with out Botnick, and introduced within the extremely revered Henry Lewy – finest recognized for his work with Joni Mitchell and Crosby, Stills & Nash – as engineer. In flip, Lewy enlisted a clutch of session gamers that included one other spherical of visitor bassists, percussionist Bobbye Corridor, jazz sax supremo Charles Lloyd and backing singers Clydie King and Venetta Fields. The surroundings modified too, albeit none too radically, The Doorways switching base from the Workshop to A&M Studios a few miles away on N. LaBrea Avenue.
The ensuing Full Circle didn’t veer very removed from its instant predecessor. Once more, Manzarek and Krieger cut up lead vocals. And whereas it’s patently unfair to check both to Morrison, each males’s singing talents are restricted, nonetheless a lot spirit they attempt to inject. They’re hardly saved by the music, both. Get Up And Dance, with The Flying Burrito Brothers’ Chris Ethridge on bass, shortly descends right into a generic chug. ‘Golden days!’ goes the lyric, as if trying to persuade themselves that they’re onto a superb factor, regardless of overwhelming proof on the contrary.
Hardwood Flooring doesn’t assist The Doorways’ quickly sliding repute both. Right here, Manzarek riffs away on rinky-dink piano like he’s enjoying for change within the saloon of some Western theme park. On Good Rockin’, a canopy of Roy Brown’s jump-blues customary made well-known by Elvis Presley as Good Rockin’ Tonight, he goes all Jerry Lee Lewis on piano whereas Krieger units about channelling Scotty Moore. The much less stated for 4 Billion Souls’ excruciating name for world peace, the higher.
But Full Circle additionally deserves credit score for daring to experiment a bit of. The Mosquito, the album’s sole three-way co-write, provides a playful and sudden burst of mariachi, full with recurring hook, handclaps and celebration atmosphere. It was impressed by a vacation that Krieger and his spouse took to Baja in Mexico, the place they had been serenaded one night by a bunch of native musicians.
“That they had a music a couple of mosquito that I wished to study,” the guitarist recalled later. “However once I obtained dwelling I couldn’t fairly keep in mind it, so I wrote my very own mariachi-sounding tune with easy Spanish lyrics.”
The Doorways lean into it with such gusto – swirling organ runs, a Densmore drum break, jazzy outro – that you would be able to nearly forgive Krieger for rhyming ‘mosquito’ with ‘burrito’.
Full Circle packs a pair extra surprises in Verdilac and The Piano Chook. The previous takes a detour into New Orleans jazz-funk, dominated by Manzarek’s organ enjoying and Charles Lloyd’s tenor sax. The Piano Chook follows in related vein, led out by Krieger’s mild, rhythmic guitar determine. There’s a free, carefree air to all of it, with Lloyd’s jazz flute excessive within the combine, maybe suggesting an sudden approach out of The Doorways’ post-Morrison malaise.
Launched in August ’72, Full Circle fared worse than Different Voices, peaking at No.68 within the States. Each albums hardly registered in any respect in different international locations, regardless of the novelty success of The Mosquito in random elements of Europe, the place it turned a High 20 single. It’s instructive to notice that Krieger dispenses with each albums inside two pages of his memoir. Densmore is much more dismissive in Riders On The Storm, washing his arms of each in simply a few paragraphs.

The Doorways had been nonetheless a good dwell draw, by means of. A lot in order that, following their subsequent tour of Europe, they flew to London in early 1973, with the specific goal of lastly bringing in a brand new frontman. They weren’t after a Morrison copyist. As an alternative, as Krieger put it, they wished “somebody who might theoretically take us in a daring new route”.
Paul McCartney, Paul Rodgers and Joe Cocker had been among the many names brainstormed in The Doorways’ resort room. Opposite to hearsay, Morrison disciple Iggy Pop was by no means in competition. A front-runner quickly emerged within the form of Howard Werth, who’d lately forsaken art-rockers Viewers for a solo profession. “I got here on the scene as a result of Jac Holzman wished to make Viewers the brand new band on his Elektra label,” Werth informed Traditional Rock in 2014. “However after we broke up he determined to attempt to put me and The Doorways collectively.”
Werth had already began work on his first solo report, King Sensible, however agreed to participate in rehearsals with Krieger, Manzarek and Densmore in West London. “These rehearsals had been fairly sturdy and highly effective,” he recalled. “We had been simply ploughing by means of. It wasn’t a matter of them out of the blue turning spherical and going: ‘Oh, that’s good’ or ‘You’re the one’. We had been simply having fun with it and ready for the scenario to occur or not. And, because it turned out, it didn’t.”
Manzarek duly flew again dwelling together with his spouse Dorothy, who was pregnant and depressing in England. However not earlier than he had rowed with Krieger and Densmore over the musical route of the band. In easy phrases, Manzarek wished extra jazz, whereas the opposite two had been intent on pursuing rock.
“It was simply time to place The Doorways to mattress,” Manzarek defined to Melody Maker later that 12 months. “Some issues can go on for a very long time and others can’t. And The Doorways with out Morrison weren’t The Doorways, had been they?”
Krieger and Densmore stayed on within the UK and fashioned the Butts Band with singer Jess Roden and others. The group lasted by means of a serious line-up change, relocation to Los Angeles and two so-so studio albums. It was, stated Krieger, “our first lesson in attempting to flee the shadow of the previous”.
In the meantime, Manzarek launched a few ill-judged solo albums, briefly rehearsed with Iggy Pop, and in 1977 began his personal band, Nite Metropolis. No one purchased these data both. The shadow of the previous, it appeared, was longer than any of them imagined.
Someday in 1977, Krieger was sorting by means of some outdated bins when he occurred upon a gift that Morrison had given him previous to leaving for Paris. Morrison had self-published a e-book of poetry, sure in pink leather-based and gold-stamped with the title An American Prayer. Leafing by means of the slim assortment, the guitarist started considering.
Morrison had gone into the studio to report some poetry in February 1969. The concept, hatched between him and Jac Holzman, was to launch a spoken-word album for Elektra. The singer returned to Village Recorders in LA on December 8, 1970 – his twenty seventh birthday. Producer John Haeny picked up Morrison on the best way, stopping off at a liquor retailer to purchase him a bottle of Outdated Bushmills Irish whiskey as a present. There was methodology in his tactic. As Haeny later defined: “[Ex-Doors producer] Paul Rothchild informed me that Irish whiskey was the important thing that unlocked the door to the room the place Jim stored the crazed Irish poet.”
Within the early summer time of 1971, at Morrison’s request Haeny had meant to journey to Paris to report the album in earnest. Nevertheless it wasn’t to be. The producer ended up sitting on the session tapes for the period, till Krieger known as a number of years later. Haeny duly invited the three surviving Doorways as much as his home in Laurel Canyon to have a take heed to the recordings.
“When Jim’s voice got here out of the audio system, I immediately heard lifts and falls,” Krieger recalled in Set The Evening On Fireplace. “Rhythms and hints of melodies. Jim had a naturally musical approach of talking, and it instantly sparked concepts in my head for guitar licks and chord constructions.”
With Haeny overseeing the mission, Krieger, Manzarek and Densmore as soon as once more set in regards to the activity of placing Morrison’s phrases to music.
Blues appeared the plain start line as a textural backdrop, completely illustrated on the sultry, bruised Angels And Sailors. However The Doorways opted to combine it up, guided by the various cadences and tones in Morrison’s speech. Curses, Invocations pivots round a discreet jazz riff; American Evening is all clangy dissonance; Ghost Music dives into fusionist funk, with Manzarek vamping away whereas visitor Bob Glaub punctuates issues with snapping bass.
Different parts are drawn from audio collage. There’s dialogue from Morrison’s experimental movie HWY: An American Pastoral, bits of jam classes, excerpts from Riders On The Storm and such. An unruly dwell model of Roadhouse Blues is spliced from two Doorways gigs in New York and Detroit from 1970. A Feast Of Associates is ready to a brand new association of classical piece Adagio In G Minor, which the band initially recorded throughout classes for The Tender Parade. “Jim had all the time liked the recording,” justified Krieger, “so we thought it could be becoming to revive the music for him.”
Thematically, An American Prayer was each self-glorifying and conceptual. The Doorways cut up the poems into 5 free sections, masking Morrison’s formative childhood, highschool years, poetic ambitions, Doorways fame and, as Manzarek later put it, “a remaining summation, in a approach, of the person’s total life and philosophy”.
Launched in November 1978, the album did a lot to therapeutic massage the parable. Daybreak’s Freeway featured the oftrepeated story of how the Morrison household – with four-year-old Jim within the again – got here throughout a truckload of Native Individuals scattered on a desert freeway, bleeding to loss of life after an accident. Wanting again, he believes that ‘the souls of the ghosts of these lifeless Indians, possibly one or two of ’em, had been simply working round freaking out/And simply leaped into my soul.’ Right here was Morrison portrayed as insurgent poet and shaman, rock’s broody leather-based Dionysus, mojo risin’ from the grave.
By no means thoughts the combined opinions, An American Prayer went platinum, turning into the biggest-selling spoken-word album in historical past on the time. Its success set into movement a Morrison revival that shortly morphed into cultural fixation. Inside six months, Francis Ford Coppola was utilizing The Doorways’ The Finish to presage the dread and horror of Apocalypse Now, Morrison’s soul-purging nightmare writ massive over American involvement in Vietnam.
In 1980, No One Right here Will get Out Alive, by Jerry Hopkins and Danny Sugerman, turned the primary Morrison biography. Criticised for Sugerman’s implication that the singer could have faked his personal loss of life, its sensationalism fed instantly into the rising legend.
Elektra sensed a possibility too. A reissue of The Doorways’ debut album was a success yet again. A hurriedly assembled ‘biggest hits’ assortment went multi-platinum. By September 1981, Rolling Stone had Morrison splashed on its cowl, 10 years after his loss of life, below the editorial: “He’s scorching, he’s horny and he’s lifeless!” It turned out that Morrison had already known as it within the phrases of An American Prayer: “We dwell, we die and loss of life not ends it.”