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Post by jym on Aug 21, 2006 23:23:23 GMT
The difference is, a year later The Doors were BIG! They probably made Mario & co tons of money selling out the venue every night. It's amazing that fucking your mother becomes OK if they're making a lot of money.
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Post by TheWallsScreamedPoetry on Jan 22, 2011 14:25:21 GMT
The Doors at the Whisky in 1966
In the summer of 1966, protests against the escalating Vietnam War turned into riots on Los Angeles’ Sunset Boulevard. And an unknown rock band called the Doors landed a residency at the Whisky a Go-Go, a club on the Sunset Strip. The group had been formed a year earlier by a couple of UCLA film students: an aspiring poet named Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, a blues keyboardist who had studied classical piano as a kid. “We were the house band at the London Fog, a pathetic little nightclub just down the street from the Whisky,” Manzarek says today. “The Whisky was mecca for us. That’s where all the big bands played. On our breaks, we’d walk down there and look in the doors and say, ’We’re the band from down the street,’ and they’d just sort of laugh at us.”
When Ronnie Harran, the booker from the Whisky, finally caught the Doors’ act, she was impressed by Morrison’s primal stage-appeal and offered the group the house-band slot: The Doors would open for the headliners, playing two sets every night. Their very first night at the Whisky, the Doors opened for Them, culminating in both Morrisons (Van and Jim) jamming onstage to “Gloria.”
At the time, the Doors had only about fifteen songs. They would throw in some James Brown and Chicago blues covers, but playing two sets a night forced the group to quite literally expand its repertoire, thus shaping the band’s sound. “Repeat and stretch,” says Manzarek. " ‘Light My Fire’ took off into solos. ‘The End’ became the epic we know now."
Soon the house band developed a following of its own, and the Whisky became a destination for local counterculture types. Says Manzarek, "There were these guys named Carl and Vito who had a dance troupe of gypsy freaks. They were let in for free, because they were these quintessential hippies, which was great for tourists. God knows if they were even on anything, they were so out of their minds, but they danced like crazy. And they loved ‘The End.’ "
An early version of “The End” — that is, one that could safely be performed at, say, the Super Bowl halftime show. Then, one night in August, Morrison didn’t show up for the Doors’ first set. The band played without him, with Manzarek and the others handling the vocals, but Whisky co-owner Phil Tanzini was furious and demanded Morrison be retrieved in time for the second set. The group found Morrison at his apartment, wearing only his underwear and tripping on acid, and managed to spirit him back to the Whisky by set time. “Jim was a little spacey, but together,” Manzarek recalls. "But then, after the third number, he turns to me and says, ’Let’s play “The End.” ’ I was like, ‘Jim, it’s only the third number.’ " The band, not surprisingly, tended to save “The End” for the finale. Still, the group took Morrison’s cue and began playing the song. “There’s a point where Morrison has a section where he can do a little improvisation, and he put his hand out to soften us down,” Manzarek says. "And for the first time, he says, ‘The killer awoke before dawn. He put his boots on.’ And one by one, the dancers all stopped and stared. When he said, ‘Father, I wanna kill you,’ we’d never heard this before, but I thought, ‘I know what’s coming next. Please don’t do it.’ "
Morrison, of course, did it. When he howled, “Mother, I want to fuck you!” the band, which had been softly accompanying his recitation, kicked into overdrive. As Manzarek recounts, “John [Densmore] whacked on his drums, I pounded on my organ, Robby [Krieger] made his guitar scream like a banshee, and all hell broke loose. The people began dancing madly. Everyone went into a Dionysian frenzy. It was Greek! Oedipus Rex had been exorcised right there on the Sunset Strip.”
The Doors left the stage thinking they’d killed, and they had. They had also offended Tanzini’s sense of propriety. He went backstage, asked Morrison, “How the fuck can you say that about your mother?” and fired the band on the spot. Krieger asked, “Do you want us to play through the weekend, or are we fired tonight?” Tanzini thought for a moment, then said, “Oh, right. You play through Sunday, then you’re fired.”
In the end, things worked out for the Doors. Two days earlier, the band had signed to Elektra Records: The L.A. rock scene would have new standard-bearers to lead the dancing gypsy freaks into the Summer of Love.
Rolling Stone.
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Post by TheWallsScreamedPoetry on May 23, 2011 7:59:15 GMT
May 23rd 1966 45 years ago today The Doors began their legendary stint at the Whisky. Not as Ray Manzarek has often told with Them but probably Buffalo Springfield or Captain Beefheart or both. Ray was even telling his stupid tale of opening for Them on this date a few months back. Why he continues to do that, when only silly people believe his nonsense, only Ray can say. His drivel was even corrected in The Doors By The Doors book but still he continues to use this story. We do not know for certain what songs were played that first night but we can imagine that the first two albums would be well represented along with a selection of covers. It is thought that the Away In India instrumental began life at the Whisky along with the Summertime jam that features on the Matrix boot. Songs like 'I Looked At You' and 'Take It As It Comes' were featured at the Whisky along with the proto versions of 'WTMO' and 'The End' and of course 'LMF' was developed further at the Fog and The Whisky. Basically these gigs were The Doors finding their feet on stage and would serve them well when a few months later the band would go into a studio as a unit for the first time. ## The Demo did not include Robby.
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