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The Doors' Strange Days

Their Most Cohesive - and Arguably Strongest - Record

By Seth Mullins, published Feb 20, 2007
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When the Doors got ready to record Strange Days, they still had a wealth of material left over from their months of rehearsing and playing the Sunset Strip; songs that hadn't been used on their groundbreaking first album. Two numbers in particular, "Moonlight Drive" and "My Eyes Have Seen You", dated back to that fateful day on the Venice beach when Jim Morrison had serenaded keyboardist Ray Manzarek for the first time.

From there the collaboration between the two began. Legend maintains that Morrison "heard" most of the songs that comprised the first two Doors albums when he was high on acid in the summer of '65 and made contact with the spirit of an Indian shaman. Certainly psychedelics had an influence on both he and Manzarek, and they began to conceive of the vast potentials inherent in combining atmospheric rock'n'roll with poetic lyrics that dealt in sweeping, universal symbols. When Robbie Krieger's highly inventive and unorthodox guitar playing and John Densmore's jazz-tinged drumming were brought into the mix, the circle was complete - and the result was a sound that no band had possessed before, nor has since.

The Doors showcased this sound well on their first album, whose centerpieces included their biggest-ever hit ("Light My Fire") and their most effective dramatic extravaganza ("The End"). But the record was a like a sampler, in some ways, of all their disparate influences. It sped through jazz, blues, hard-edged rock, exotic sounds, and lighter pop sometimes without rhyme or reason.

Follow-up album Strange Days, on the other hand, was a cohesive statement both musically and lyrically. The Doors graduated from the primitive technology they'd been obliged to use the first time around when Electra records started implementing 8-tracks (!). The band utilized the extra recording space to enhance Morrison's voice and weave strange effects around his recitation of "Horse Latitudes", a poem he'd written while still in High School.

Takeaways
  • Each song adds to a collective sense of confusion, even disorientation
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