Submitted by UAR-mwfree on Aug 04
The Doors photo

 

The Doors Album album cover

 

The Doors – The Doors (1967):  The Doors’ first album The Doors was a bolt from the blue that seemingly everyone had to own – the album was so powerful on so many levels that it seemed to inhabit a category all its own.  The outsized personality of lead singer Jim Morrison dominated the band, though the other bandmembers were equally laden with talent.  Along with Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison was one of the most famous members of the “27 Club”:  popular musicians who died when they were 27 years old.  Their first hit song “Light My Fire” closes Side 1 and is as irresistible today as it was more than a half-century ago, particularly the “long version” as given on the album.  Also, their dark, meandering masterpiece “The End” is the final cut on Side 2; it was memorably at the forefront of the soundtrack for Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam War epic Apocalypse Now (1979).  While these two tracks get all of the ink, the other songs on the album are equally great, from group-penned songs like “Soul Kitchen” and “Twentieth Century Fox” to classics like the Bertolt Brecht/Kurt Weill composition “Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)” and the Howlin’ Wolf/Willie Dixon song “Back Door Man”.