Post by TheWallsScreamedPoetry on Jan 9, 2012 12:35:22 GMT
The Doors: LA Woman
This is a sad album! Not because it was released just before Jim died or because it was the final offering from The Doors but because of the songs. Jim’s lyrics did not fool the fans who cared about him. He had had enough and yet produced some of the most passionate lyrics of the bands career. This is the blues album he always craved but which his image denied him.
His voice is deep, throaty and just about surviving but this only serves to enhance the bluesy feel.
Opening with ‘The Changeling’ combining a rock solid beat with a harsh vocal, which is shocking after the mellow tones of Morrison Hotel, confirming what we all knew, that Jim was many people under one roof and didn’t care who knew.
‘Love Her Madly’ is the carnivalesque Doors with Jim’s double-track voice booming jauntily against a jazz piano doing justice to Robby's lovelorn lyric.
‘Been Down So Long’ seems to sum up the last few months of Jim’s time on earth and features his harsh bluesy voice bemoaning his lonely predicament in a totally tuneless tone.
Sanity is restored with ‘Cars Hiss By My Window’ which seems to be a rather personal reflection of an actual incident in that troubled life. Its blues orientated arrangement and softly subdued guitar against a lovely squashy drumbeat finishing with an astonishing howl at the end imitating a bottleneck guitar through a dish-cloth.
‘LA Woman’ is a tour-de-force for other Doors.
Although the lyrics are typically clever and personal it’s the instrumental which governs this song with Ray’s keyboard dominating a cracking overall sound leaving the listener breathless in the wake of its ingenuity.
‘L’America’ is an earlier recorded song written for the movie but failing to make the final ‘Zabriske Point’ soundtrack.
Jim is in great voice complimented by a quirky backing and some terrific off beat drumming which doesn’t grab immediately but gets there in the end.
‘Hyacinth House’ is a gem comprising a guitar riff that most bands would kill for. A hauntingly beautiful organ and such painful personal lyrics which scream for questions on Jim’s state of mind. This was a cry for help and is such an obvious statement of sadness it positively bellows ‘HELP!’ and nobody realised until it was too late. Or so John would have us believe but scepticism is rife in hindsight. For me this is the best track on the album.
‘Crawling King Snake’ is a song they had been performing live since the early days and Jim's voice is really strong against Robby’s searing guitar licks doing total justice to this classic blues that would seem to have been written with our boy in mind.
‘The WASP (Texas Radio & The Big Beat)’ is a Jim poem to a terrific blues backing dominated by John’s superb drumming. This is the up-beat version as opposed to the slow whispering version so beloved of the moody bluesy Jim. He is in fine voice belying the ravages his vocal chords had taken over the previous months.
The same can be said of ‘Riders On The Storm’, dismissed by former producer Paul Rothchild as ‘cocktail muzak’, a lovely tinkling piano runs through the song which contains some of Jim’s darkest lyrics. A booming bass-line heightens the downbeat atmosphere prevalent on this final vinyl offering. Jim controls his voice almost to a point of lethargy which only strengthens the mod of menace hidden in the seemingly innocuous lyric.
This was the bands most critically acclaimed album and a fitting epitaph to a frustrated blues artist who only realised his ambition when it was too late to be recognised it is a pity that critics didn’t pay more attention to the music earlier instead of trying to provoke hysteria of the wrong sort from an ever gullible public.
Although Jim always gave the impression that he didn’t pay any attention to criticism wouldn’t it have been nice to think that earlier in the bands career he could have read something favourable?
Success isn’t always the criteria by which favourable reviews are measured unfortunately.
Rest in Peace babe!
By Sue Jeffries from Walsall
## Sue used to run the UK Doors fanclub
This is a sad album! Not because it was released just before Jim died or because it was the final offering from The Doors but because of the songs. Jim’s lyrics did not fool the fans who cared about him. He had had enough and yet produced some of the most passionate lyrics of the bands career. This is the blues album he always craved but which his image denied him.
His voice is deep, throaty and just about surviving but this only serves to enhance the bluesy feel.
Opening with ‘The Changeling’ combining a rock solid beat with a harsh vocal, which is shocking after the mellow tones of Morrison Hotel, confirming what we all knew, that Jim was many people under one roof and didn’t care who knew.
‘Love Her Madly’ is the carnivalesque Doors with Jim’s double-track voice booming jauntily against a jazz piano doing justice to Robby's lovelorn lyric.
‘Been Down So Long’ seems to sum up the last few months of Jim’s time on earth and features his harsh bluesy voice bemoaning his lonely predicament in a totally tuneless tone.
Sanity is restored with ‘Cars Hiss By My Window’ which seems to be a rather personal reflection of an actual incident in that troubled life. Its blues orientated arrangement and softly subdued guitar against a lovely squashy drumbeat finishing with an astonishing howl at the end imitating a bottleneck guitar through a dish-cloth.
‘LA Woman’ is a tour-de-force for other Doors.
Although the lyrics are typically clever and personal it’s the instrumental which governs this song with Ray’s keyboard dominating a cracking overall sound leaving the listener breathless in the wake of its ingenuity.
‘L’America’ is an earlier recorded song written for the movie but failing to make the final ‘Zabriske Point’ soundtrack.
Jim is in great voice complimented by a quirky backing and some terrific off beat drumming which doesn’t grab immediately but gets there in the end.
‘Hyacinth House’ is a gem comprising a guitar riff that most bands would kill for. A hauntingly beautiful organ and such painful personal lyrics which scream for questions on Jim’s state of mind. This was a cry for help and is such an obvious statement of sadness it positively bellows ‘HELP!’ and nobody realised until it was too late. Or so John would have us believe but scepticism is rife in hindsight. For me this is the best track on the album.
‘Crawling King Snake’ is a song they had been performing live since the early days and Jim's voice is really strong against Robby’s searing guitar licks doing total justice to this classic blues that would seem to have been written with our boy in mind.
‘The WASP (Texas Radio & The Big Beat)’ is a Jim poem to a terrific blues backing dominated by John’s superb drumming. This is the up-beat version as opposed to the slow whispering version so beloved of the moody bluesy Jim. He is in fine voice belying the ravages his vocal chords had taken over the previous months.
The same can be said of ‘Riders On The Storm’, dismissed by former producer Paul Rothchild as ‘cocktail muzak’, a lovely tinkling piano runs through the song which contains some of Jim’s darkest lyrics. A booming bass-line heightens the downbeat atmosphere prevalent on this final vinyl offering. Jim controls his voice almost to a point of lethargy which only strengthens the mod of menace hidden in the seemingly innocuous lyric.
This was the bands most critically acclaimed album and a fitting epitaph to a frustrated blues artist who only realised his ambition when it was too late to be recognised it is a pity that critics didn’t pay more attention to the music earlier instead of trying to provoke hysteria of the wrong sort from an ever gullible public.
Although Jim always gave the impression that he didn’t pay any attention to criticism wouldn’t it have been nice to think that earlier in the bands career he could have read something favourable?
Success isn’t always the criteria by which favourable reviews are measured unfortunately.
Rest in Peace babe!
By Sue Jeffries from Walsall
## Sue used to run the UK Doors fanclub