Showing posts with label Doors-The. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doors-The. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2011

The Doors: TV Appearances 1967-68 (Soundboard) FLAC

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Title: Celebration
Source: Ex- ~ Ex+ Soundboard Recording
Lineage: The Swingin' Pig (TSP-CD-022) Boot 1CD > EAC > FLAC

01: Light My Fire
02: Touch Me
03: When The Music's Over
04: The End
05: Moonlight Drive
06: Light My Fire

01: Ed Sulliven Show. USA, 1967.
02: Smother Brothers Show. USA, December 1968.
03 ~ 04: L.A. July 05, 1968.
05 ~ 06: Jonathan Winters TV Show. USA, December 27, 1967.

rar files packed with a (winrar) recovery record -
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Sunday, September 4, 2011

The Doors: Tour 1968 (Soundboard) FLAC

speed corrected version now available
Doors A
Apocalypse Now
Recorded live on their 1968 "Waiting for the sun" tour
An " Off - Master"
Stereo Soundboard recording

01 - Five To one
02 - Mack The Knife - Alabama Song
03 - Backdoor Man
04 - You're Lost, Little Girl
05 - Love Me Two Times
06 - When The Music's Over
07 - Wild Child
08 - Money
09 - Wake Up
10 - Light My Fire
11 - The End
12 - Unknown Soldier
Total Running Time 73:16

Note: EAC Database extracted Song #3 as Blackdoor man. Md5 recognizes song as such. Should be Backdoor Man

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Comments welcome.

Monday, August 29, 2011

The Doors: Danbury 1967 (Soundboard) FLAC

by request
1285990841
The Doors: Danbury High School, Danbury CT. 1967
17 Oct 67 (there is some debate about the exact date)
3rd gen. P.A. recording by faculty member.good stereo separation....maybe done with mics hanging over the stage?
not sure but it sounds great for the vintage! The End from this show is one of the best you will ever hear!

this is another Greg Shaw source tape. sent to me as 3rd gen. on metal cass. from the master.

1. announcements
2. moonlight drive (incl. Horse latitudes)
3. Money
4. Break on through
5. Backdoor man
6. People are strange
7. Crystal ship
8. wake up! >
9. Light My Fire
10. The End*
*I am quite sure that this track is in the download but if it is incomplete then use these links:
http://hotfile.com/dl/128341731/3839da2/Desktp.rar.html
http://www.fileserve.com/file/uB6AUFy/Desktp.rar


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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

The Doors: Asbury Park 1968 (VG Aud) FLAC

THE DOORS 1968 August 31 Asbury Park, Convention Hall FRONT
Saturday August 31, 1968
Convention Hall, Asbury Park, New Jersey, USA
Mini Northeast tour - August 30, 1968 - September 1, 1968
7:00 p.m. Early Show
9:45 p.m. Late Show

1. Back Door Man 2:45
2. Five To One 5:51
3. Break On Through 3:40
4. Love Me Two Times 3:34
5. When The Music's Over 13:34
6. Spanish Caravan 2:55
7. Soul Kitchen > Pray The Lord 8:14
8. Wake Up! 2:20
9. Light My Fire 9:45
The End
Total running time: 52:39

SOURCE: Audience recording (remastered)
Lineage: Aud > 1st gen copy > WAV > Flac
The original source runs 52:56 in 8 tracks (the first two being in one).

Recently discovered uncirculating show previously only available to selected traders. Still not confirmed whether it is the early or the late show but reviews and certain accounts suggest it's likely the latter one. Quality of this 1st generation recording is way above medium, similar to other recordings from the 1968 US summer tour.

Original notes: "Here it is. The show I suspect many of you have been waiting for -- the first completely new Doors audience recording to turn up in years. For collectors, finding a new tape is a lot like getting tickets to a Doors show in 1968. You can't believe your luck and you don't know what to expect. I'm releasing this on what would have been Jim Morrison's 66th birthday this year so please spare him a thought and toast something to his memory.
Technical Notes: The original transfer wasn't very good. One channel suffers from
distortion throughout and the other has some clipped audio. For this copy, I simply
copied over the cleaner channel, restored the clipped portions, and removed a few
clicks/pops. I didn't EQ or make any other major changes." Porsche, December 8, 2009

NOTES "The Doors were on tour full-time in 1968, roaring generally to all major cities in the US and due to their already earned notoriety in the media, the word of their coming has preceded the band, causing high anticipation and sold-out venues all across the country. During this summer tour, a tour that US has never seen before for all its near-riot gigs along with the singer's controversial theatrics, the band have reached the pinnacle of their live performances. These were musically and artistically the most blazing times of their carrier with Jim being the guiding light, now perfectly in command with his act, if he wants to, with his fascinating stage persona often full of unexpectedness and drama backed by a loyal band very much in tune with him.
After they finished off their hefty East Coast tour on August 4 in Philadelphia, and basicly six months of constant touring, they took a three week long rest to be fit for the coming European tour. Still, in order not to lose focus, they got back on the road on August 30, 1968 with a short but rather effective warm-up tour on the North East coast before taking Europe in their stride in September.
These were not sold-out shows but none of them was short in attendance and sold quite well despite the fact they were late additions and there was no time for advertising. The first of the four shows they were scheduled to play in three days was an outdoor concert in Columbia, Maryland at Merriweather Post Pavilion where the band performed to several thousands under the trees of Symphony Woods.
On the following day, Frank Lisciandro photographed Jim and his entourage, including Bill Siddons, Babe Hill and Paul Ferrara, as they were taking their plane to Asbury, New Jersey. There, they pulled off two sets at the Convention Hall, located on the boardwalk and on the beach in Asbury Park, in front of an appreciative crowd which filled two thirds of the 3600 capacity arena. Opening act were Earth Opera which Bruce, a then 15 year old kid remembers "did great until they performed the Great
American Eagle Tragedy, when the greasers took exception to Peter Rowan's classic anti-war song and flung garbage at the stage until the band fled and the stage was surrounded by regular and rent-a-cops, on hand to deal with a George Wallace rally taking place outside. This is how the Doors landed on stage."
As usual, they kicked off the late show with 'Back Door Man' but Jim was not yet in the mood, resulting a laid back opener. He began seemingly incurious; there were no moans or shouts nor any of his routines to set the mood, only plain but resolute singing. Right before Robbie started his guitar solo, which gave back the performance its edge, did Jim finally let a scream out. As soon as Robbie finished his part, Jim began to sing 'Five To One' straight off, drawing wild applause and forcing his mates to change the melody in the spur of the moment. Jim is appearently much more into performing this tune and with his vocal chords warmed up, he brings his finest form to the performance, profundly emphasizing certain parts of the lyrics, shouting "We're gonna take it over! COME ON!!" in the midst of wild cheers to which Robbie delivers a spectacular guitar solo. Evidently in the mood by now, he decides to play with the audience during the end of the song, singing "get together for just one more..." repeatedly, over and over for minutes until the crowd grew impatient enough for Jim to finally exclaim "I mean EVERYBODY gotta get together just one more TIME!!" The band responds with an ear-shattering sounds of noise closing the 14 minute long spellbinding performance.
The act, which is rarely pulled off puts the audience in awe and receives an enormous applause.
After the boistorous performance Jim addressed the crowd: "Yeah! We definetly wanna have fun tonight, okay? Anything goes!" He's putting on a bold front in the following 'Break On Through' and he's in complete contrast to his opening: he's engaged and performs the song at an overwhelming pace, setting the tone for Robby as well. 'Love Me Two Times' countinues with the same commitment and Jim finishes off the tune singing from full throat. 'When The Music's Over' starts with Jim remarking "beautiful" while Ray plays the intro. The performance is dominated by Robbie's very own, extraterrestrial guitar solo with ear-tearing licks. During the long silent part a heckler unexpectedly lets out an "aSShole!" to which Jim
responds after a few seconds: "Come up here and I'll show you something." This earns a big laughter from the crowd which is appearently fond of witnessing such uncontrolled interaction between singer and attendant.
As Jim countinues to tease the crowd along to Ray's monotone play in the back, they became more and more reckless, stirring up other members of the audience as well, who suddenly scream as one, shouting "What are you waiting for?!" "F- You!" In return Jim answers patiently: "I wonder if you wanna.. you wanna hear it?"
But his remark arose another wave of hecklers screaming, shouting requests which Jim laughs off scornfully.
Suddenly he bursts out in anger: "OH COME ON LITTLE F-CKER, SHUT UP AND LISTEN!! ... We Want the world and we want it NOW!" He finshes the song being just as restless as his audience while the band gives the song the grand finale with all its glory and thundering sounds featuring Ray's extraordinary improvisation after the climaxing part - similarly compelling as Robbie's licks before. Spanish Caravan follows, an ever-present tune in these summer setlists, and tonight an engaging rendition with Jim's and Robbie's great duet which receives an adoring applause.
A remarkably extended 'Soul Kitchen' follows with Robby's excellent guitar solo, featuring Jim inserting improvised lyrics "Something wrong, something not quite right" lifted from 'When The Music's Over' where it's usually sang live. Clearly inspired, later Jim also adlibs the closing lines of 'Summers Almost Gone'
to the tune: "We gotta go now, we gotta go now, We had a good time, but they're gone." After the performance people started shouting requests again, including 'Light My Fire' and 'The End' and surprisingly enough, they did receive both. Jim bursts into 'Wake Up!' and led the audience casually through the performance.
Then everyone went wild and cheered enthusiastically when the band kicked off 'Light My Fire,' - probably the most cheered song all night - and get what they came for in an excessive performance. Greg Shaw in "The Doors On The Road" reports: "After The Doors’ finale of “Light My Fire”, the audience is well on their way to the exits when Morrison unexpectedly reappears onstage. Somewhat shyly he announces, “Hey! The show was supposed to end with that number, but [pause] I don’t see why we can’t go on!” All at once, the entire crowd reverses in a huge surge, cheering, shouting, scaling chairs, and prompting the hall’s security forces to encircle the stage. The mesmerizing opening chords of “The End” serve to induce a calm trance throughout the scores of people crushed against the stage, and The Doors conclude the show with a terrific version of the song."
Vince Treanor, the Doors' road manager recollections of the night: "The show, fueled by excitement and Jim's moderate drinking, was another success. There were no riots, no excitement. Just another good show. When it was all over, the crowds still loud with excitement and the experience went out peacefully. Again, it might not have been one of the best but compared to the performances after Amsterdam, it was magnificent.""
Reviewed by Buda, 2010

"The Story Behind the Autograph" by photographer Cal Deal, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, January 15, 1999;
"HOURS BEFORE The Doors were to appear at the Asbury Park in 1968, a film crew was packing up on the boardwalk outside Convention Hall.
"Are you guys with The Doors?" I said.
"Yes."
I reached into a pile of photographs I was carrying. They were pictures I had taken of Morrison at the Fillmore East, screaming into a microphone. I brought about 30 prints along to sell for $1.50 each. I pulled out a print and asked them to give it to Morrison. They said they would. After the concert, Convention Hall was emptying. I had been sitting near the front and was nearing the rear exits. I heard a voice on the loudspeaker. It was Morrison.
"Hey, where ya goin'? C'mon back!" he said.
Surprised, I turned and looked across the half-empty hall to see The Doors back on stage! The shocked crowd ran toward them; it was every man for himself. I wound up at stage center, just feet from Morrison.
I was carrying the last remaining unsold photograph. I yelled "Jim!" to get his attention. He turned toward me, and I reached up to hand him the envelope. He came over, took it, opened it and looked at the photo right there on stage. Morrison held up his index finger and said "wait a minute." He started walking toward the back of the stage. Suddenly I realized he was going to autograph it.
"No, I want you to have it!" I yelled. Morrison went behind the amplifiers and came back with a pen. He stood on the edge of the stage, towering over me.
"What's your name?" he said.
"Cal."
"With a C?"
"Yeah."
He wrote something and turned the picture over to take another look.
"Where'd you take it?" he asked.
"At the Fillmore East!" I shouted.
He leaned toward me and gave it back.
"Pretty neat," he said.
I grabbed it and looked to see what he had written. It said:
Cal J Morrison

MONTHS LATER I got a call from an editor at Teen Scoop magazine in New York City. Someone in The Doors' management had told them about the picture. The magazine wanted to use it. We made a deal and it appeared across pages 20 and 21 of the September 1968 issue. I think I got $35. The headline: "JIM MORRISON, rebel
with a cause." Looking back, I think he signed the photo because the film crew had gotten the other copy to him. Occasionally I'll tell people about the autograph incident. Once a couple of Doors fans from Europe asked if they could see the picture. They wanted to touch the photo that had been touched by Morrison. I let them. (This 1968 photo of Jim Morrison at the Fillmore East in New York City is from the only known surviving print. The negative has been lost.)"

Review taken from the book "The Doors On The Road", by Greg Shaw, 1997, p. 125-126;
"The Doors perform two shows this evening, and the second is reportedly the more powerful. As the late show opens, Morrison slowly saunters up to his microphone, closes his eyes, throws his head back, and stands motionless for a long time with the exception of one hand that almost imperceptibly caresses the mike during the silence. The tension continues to build throughout the hushed auditorium until, as if on some transcendental cue, Densmore kicks off the introductory beat to “Break On Through”, and the band is off to a phenomenal show.
After The Doors’ finale of “Light My Fire”, the audience is well on their way to the exits when Morrison unexpectedly reappears onstage. Somewhat shyly he announces, “Hey! The show was supposed to end with that number, but [pause] I don’t see why we can’t go on!” All at once, the entire crowd reverses in a huge surge,
cheering, shouting, scaling chairs, and prompting the hall’s security forces to encircle the stage. The mesmerizing opening chords of “The End” serve to induce a calm trance throughout the scores of people crushed against the stage, and The Doors conclude the show with a terrific version of the song.

*There are about 3X this much of notes in the download!

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Monday, November 9, 2009

The Doors: Europe September 1968 Complete Box Set (FLAC*)

*also includes a few rare pieces of video concert footage
The_Doors_wallpaper_(5)
Part 1
1968.09.03 London, Heathrow airport, England
1968.09.05 London, BBC-1 'Top of The Pops' TV Show, England
1968.09.06 London, The Roundhouse, England (Early Show)
1968.09.06 London, The Roundhouse, England (Late Show) [AUD]
1968.09.06 London, The Roundhouse, England (Late Show) [SBD] #1 RB
1968.09.06 London, The Roundhouse, England (Late Show) [SBD] #2 RB
1968.09.07 London, ICA Gallery, The Mall, England - Press Conference
1968.09.07 London, The Roundhouse, England (Early Show) [AUD]
1968.09.07 London, The Roundhouse, England (Early Show) [VID]
1968.09.07 London, The Roundhouse, England (Late Show) [AUD]
1968.09.08 London, England - Geoffrey Cannon interviews Jim Morrison

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Part 2
1968.09.13 Frankfurt, ZDF '4-3-2-1 Hot & Sweet' TV Show, West Germany
1968.09.14 Frankfurt, Kongreßhalle, West Germany (Early Show) [AUD] LP Remaster
1968.09.14 Frankfurt, Kongreßhalle, West Germany (Early Show) [AUD] TNOF
1968.09.14 Frankfurt, Kongreßhalle, West Germany (Late Show) [SBD]
1968.09.15 Amsterdam, Concertgebouw, The Netherlands [AUD] 1st gen
1968.09.17 Copenhagen, Falkoner Theatre, Denmark
1968.09.18 Copenhagen, Television-Byen, Denmark [SBD] AHTAN

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Part 3 includes
1968.09.20 Stockholm, Konserthuset, Sweden (Early Show) [SBD] Remaster
1968.09.20 Stockholm, Konserthuset, Sweden (Late Show) [SBD] Pre-FM

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Important Note: Some thread lengths may be too long for winrar unless you download to your desktop. Unrar from there and then move your files to the location of your choice.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

The Doors of the 21st Century: California Speedway 2002 (VG Aud) FLAC

if you liked The Doors you will very probably like this too.
iseverybodyin-front
Is everybody in?
September 6th, 2002
California Speedway Fontana, California, USA
Source: Audience
Lineage: Unknown
Quality: B

Disc 1
1. Introduction By Jim Ladd
2. Roadhouse Blues
3. Break On Through
4. When The Music's Over
5. Love Me Two Times
6. Alabama Song
7. Back Door Man
8. Five To One
9. Strange Days
10. Ghost Song / The Hill Dweles (From "Celebration Of The Lizard")
11. Love Street (Extended Piano Solo)
12. Moonlight Drive
13. Horse Latitudes
14. Wild Child

Disc 2
1. Summer's Almost Gone
2. L.A. Woman
3. Light My Fire
4. Riders On The Storm
5. Roadhouse Blues (w/ Robbie Krieger's son, Waylon Krieger)

Ray Manzarek: keyboards
Robbie Krieger: guitars
Ian Astbury: vocals
Stewart Copeland: drums

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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

The Doors of the 21st Century: Los Angeles 2003 (Ex+ Aud) FLAC

If you like The Doors you'll very probably like this also!
cs-Doors21st8-Atlanta102403
LIVE IN LOS ANGELES, NEW YEARS EVE 2003-4

D1 - 01 - Peace Frog
D1 - 02 - Roadhouse Blues
D1 - 03 - Break On Through
D1 - 04 - When The Music's Over
D1 - 05 - Love Me Two Times
D1 - 06 - Whiskey Bar & Back Door Man
D1 - 07 - Five To One
D1 - 08 - The Crystal Ship
D1 - 09 - People Are Strange
D1 - 10 - Spanish Caravan

D2 - 01 - The Changeling
D2 - 02 - Love Her Madly
D2 - 03 - Been Down So Long
D2 - 04 - Riders On The Storm
D2 - 05 - L'america
D2 - 06 - Cars Hiss By My Window
D2 - 07 - Hyacinth House
D2 - 08 - Texas Radio & The Big Beat
D2 - 09 - Not To Touch The Earth
D2 - 10 - La Woman

D3 - 01 - Wild Child
D3 - 02 - Soul Kitchen
D3 - 03 - Light My Fire

From wiki:In 2002, Manzarek and Krieger reunited and produced a new version of The Doors, called "The Doors of the 21st Century." The lineup was fronted by Astbury, with Angelo Barbera from Krieger's band on bass. At their first concert, the group announced that drummer John Densmore would not perform, and it was later reported that he was unable to play because he suffered from tinnitus. Densmore was initially replaced by Stewart Copeland of The Police, but after Copeland broke his arm falling off a bicycle, the arrangement ended in mutual lawsuits, and he was replaced by Ty Dennis, drummer with Krieger's band. Densmore subsequently claimed that he had in fact not been invited to take part in the reunion. In February 2003, he filed an injunction against his former band mates, hoping to prevent them from using the name "The Doors of the 21st Century." His motion was denied in court and Ray Manzarek publicly stated that the invitation for Densmore to return to the group still stood. It was also reported that both Morrison's family and that of Pamela Courson had joined Densmore in seeking to prevent Manzarek and Krieger from using The Doors' name. In July 2005, Densmore and the Morrison estate won a permanent injunction, causing the new band to switch to the name "D21C." It now plays under the name Riders on the Storm, a song by The Doors released in 1971 as the last track on the final Morrison-Era album, L.A. Woman. They are allowed to play under names such as "former Doors" and "members of The Doors." Later in July 2007 Densmore said that he would not rejoin The Doors unless it was fronted by Eddie Vedder. Densmore says, "I play with Jim. If there's someone of that level, OK. I'm not gonna join them with Ian. That's not to diss Ian, he's a good singer - but he's no Jim Morrison. Eddie Vedder? My God, there's a singer."
Densmore has been steadfast in refusing to license The Doors' music for use in television commercials, including an offer of $15 million by Cadillac to lease the song "Break on Through (to the Other Side)," feeling that that would be in violation of the spirit in which the music was created. Densmore wrote about this subject for The Nation. He later gave an interview about this to LA Times:
People lost their virginity to this music, got high for the first time to this music. I've had people say kids died in Vietnam listening to this music, other people say they know someone who didn't commit suicide because of this music.... On stage, when we played these songs, they felt mysterious and magic. That's not for rent.[9]
Ray Manzarek was quoted as saying, "We're all getting older. We should, the three of us, be playing these songs because, hey, the end is always near. Morrison was a poet, and above all, a poet wants his words heard." When Morrison was asked what he would most like to be remembered for, he responded, "My words, man, my words."[10]
On February 16, 2007 Ian Astbury quit Riders on the Storm, and relaunched his old band The Cult. On March 14, 2007 Brett Scallions, former lead singer of the band Fuel, was announced as the new lead singer of Riders on the Storm.

OU Notes: I have collected every Doors of the 21st Century recording (whether it's a bootleg or official release). overall, this limited edition new years eve concert on 12-31-03 has the best overall sound and inspired performance of anything i have (in my opinion). although jim morrison could never be replicated to the whole worlds satisfaction, ian astbury does a fantastic job singing and almost literally kicks the audiences ass into being the rowdy crowd the doors enjoyed performing for back in the 60's. ray and robby are in perfect form - angelo barbera does a superb job on bass guitar - and they couldn't have a better guy on the drums than ty dennis - would've been nice to have densmore filling that corner of the diamond, but he opted out of the reincarnation band - why? because he was burnt out and claimed he had tinnitus (regardless of being in a drum band) - so he sued ray and robby for using the name DOORS, subsequently won the case, and the doors of the 21st century then became "riders on the storm" - soon after this show, angelo barbera was replaced (by phil chen) due to his fear of flying (which is a big problem for overseas shows) - also, ian astbury eventually left to further the repertoire and legacy of "the cult". brett scallions stepped in as singer for the newly named "riders on the storm" band. nothing against brett, but i think ian had the role nailed down about as good as it gets. SO, download these FLAC files created from the original discs, crank your stereo and enjoy!!

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Monday, July 13, 2009

The Doors: Flushing Meadows Park 1968 (VG Aud)

The Doors 1968 August 2 Flushing Meadows cover FRONT2
August 2nd (Friday), 1968
Flushing Meadows Park, Singer Bowl, Queens, New York
- The New York Rock Festival at The Singer Bowl -

- Introductory Instrumental (without Jim)
1. Back Door Man 3:32
2. Five To One 4:40
3. Break On Through 3:40
4. When The Music's Over > 12:33
"Vast Radiant Beach" >
"Dawn's Highway" >
"The Royal Sperm"
5. Wild Child 2:46
6. Wake Up 1:36
7. Light My Fire 8:45
8. The End* 17:04

*Taken from an alternate source
Total running time 54:36

SOURCE
Part of a 2006 Doors vine at Trader's Den
1st gen > flac (No cdr process were involved)
Very good audience recording 7/10

NOTES from Stephen Davis, Greg Shaw, Bill Tikellis and Billy Hadley
Excerpt taken from Stephen Davis' book on Jim Morrison p. 272-276:
------------------------------------------------------------------
When the Doors went back east with their film crew in early August 1968, Jim Morrison was primed. Although half drunk, ge played a riveting, focused show with his eyes closed in Bridgeport, Connecticut, on August 1, barely moving at all as a looming summer thunderstorm echoed over the Long Island Sound. the concert had a surreal vibe as Jim bore down, enunciating lyrics and poems with hyperbolic clarity. The audience sat transfixed, and left quietly after the encores "Little Red Rooster" and "The Unknown Soldier."
The next night, August 2, the film crew finally got its riot.
It was a steamy friday night in New York City. The Doors were headlining the Super Bowl, in Flushing Meadows, Queens. There was tension backstage. The opening act, the rip-roaring English band the Who, perhaps the most hottest group in the world that summer, were angry they weren't headlining, and demanded the Doors' gear not be onstage as they played their incendiary live show that ended in explosions and splintered guitars. During the Who's set, the Singer Bowl's revolving stage malfunctioned, leaving a large part of the audinece unable to see the performance and extremely annoyed.
Jim rode to the show in a limo with Jac Holyman and Ellen Sander, who later wrote: "Morrison and 'the boys' had grown apart. He was too crazy, too unreliable, too intellectual, too conceited, but mostly he was too insecure. They shummed him socially, and he retailated by terrorizing them with the threat that he'd quit. He was lonely, as all writers must be, and he often drank himself blind and created a scene. He was also a rather pleasant guy when he wasn't acting out."
On the ride to the gig Jim flipped through the Village Voice and mumbled about how bored he was in New York. The driver got lost. "Fucking anarchy," Jim said. He started singing "Eleanor Rigby." Sander told him he was weird, and Jim said, "I tries." In a traffic jam near the Singer Bowl, Jim opened the limo's window and let a mob of excited kids grope him.
"Will some of you chicks escort me backstage?" he asked. "I might get mobbed or something."
The backstage area was cramped and sterile. Checking the film crew was with him, Jim stepped out to the crowd and was surronded bykids who seemed afraid to get too close. He signed a few autographs and then disappeared backstage.
Pandenmonium ensued when the Doors finally appeared after an hour's delay, ushered through the fifteen-thousand-strong crowd by a newly hired phalanx of black Philadelphia private detectives in stingy-brim hats. Off-duty uniformed police repelled an initial assault on the stage, then formed into a defensive perimeter. Jim had to push his way through the line of though New York street cops in order to face the crowd.
"Cool down," he told them. "We are going to be here a long time."
He preached to them, screamed, moaned, collapsed, and pussy-footed along the rim of the stage. The kids infront tried to grab at him, and twenty cops onstage had to pry them away. Jim intercut familiar songs with long stretches of "Cleberation" and other snatches of surreal, ad-libbed poetry that mystified the restive Long Island teenagers. When the cops got rough with the kids upfront, wooden seats flow onto the stage, Jim picked them up and threw them back into the convulsive crowd. The film crew kept shooting and tried to duck the lying debris.
The last song of the night was "The End." The kids, who couldn't see were fustrated, upset, and very loud. Many tried to speak to Jim onstage. Others ket shouting "Sit down" at overwrought kids standing on chairs to see better.
"Shhhh," Jim whispered. "Hey, everyone! This is serious now. Everyone - get quiet, man. You're gonna ruin this thing. Shhhhh."
He kept interrupting the familiar flow of the recorded version with poetic interjections - "Fall down now, strange gods are coming" amd other improvistaions. At one point he shrieked, as if in a nightmare: "Don't come here! Don't come in!" When he began the Oedipal verses, the audience was way ahead of him, yelling "And he walked on down the hall" before Jim spoke the line himself. When Jim got to the climactic "Mother?" hundreds of young girls screamed in terror. As the band crashed into the finale, Jim collapsed onstage like he'd been shot, and the stadium exploded. Robby Krieger finished the set in the electric storm of reverb and feedback.
Jim wasn't finished yet. As the show was ending, he went to the edge of the stage and made a negative connection with a young Hispanic couple he"d been yeing down front. He looked at this big Puerto Rican guy and said, "Who's that Mexican slut you're with tonight?" The guy picked up his seat and heaved it at Jim. The whole stage area erupted in dozens of chairs came flying through the hot, humid air. Jim kept dancng and laughing hysterically. The cops tried to get him off the stage, but he layed down and they couldn't move him.
Finally the Afro-American bodyguards hustled the band toward the dressing room. the cops fought with the kids, and a miniriot ensued with a dozen arrests and several injuries, all reported in papers the next day.
The Doors road crew had to defend the amplifiers from being torn apart. After the crowd was cleared out, the Singer Bowl looked like it had been bombed.
Pete Townshend, the Who's flamboyouant, intellectuallead gutarist, watched this wild drama from the side of the stage. He saw Jim watching impassively as his bodyguards roughed up kids who just wanted to get near him. He thought he had seen it all by then, but he was amazed by Jim Morrison's calculated escalation of the crowd's mood adulation to rapture to chaos and violence. He wrote the song "Sally Simpson" soon afterward, in a backhand tribute to Jim.
Backstage, as the film crew"s camera rolled, Jim comforted a teenage girl who had been hit in the head by a flying chair. She was bleedingfrom a scalp wound and trying to stop crying as Jim put his arm around her.
"It's demoracy," Jim said shootingly, looking into the camera with a crooked smirk. "Somebody hit her with a chair. There"s no way to tell who"s did it." Tenderly, Jim wiped blood from her face. "It's already coagulating," he cooed. "She was just an innocent bystander."
When a groupie -looking chick shasayed by in a red dress, Jim grabbed her and stuck his hand up her dress for the benefit of the camera,smiling broadly. Later he said, "Did you think it looked phony, me talking to her liked that?"
On Saturday, August 3, 1968, "Hello, I Love You" was the top single in the country, blaring mindlessly from every car in America.
The Doors played the Cleveland Public Auditorium that night, with Jim again working the crowd forthe film crew. He arrived at the hall shit-faced, and let the band play "Break On Throgh" for five minutes without him. when Jim finally appeared, he was clutching a quart of Jack Daniel's in his right hand a nd giving the sold-out, nine-thousand seat a finger with his left. He began shouting and lurching around, singing incoherently as Krieger tried to drown him out with extraloud shards of feedback and echo. This got Jim mad. "I can't hear myself! I'm gonna give you a good time, but I want it real soft." He turned to the band. "If I can't hear myself, I'm gonna get a gun and kill some people here."
During a long, horrid version of "Five To One" he started talking with the kids upfront, drawing up in laughter, derivision, and applause. Then he yelled "Listen! Llisten! I want you to feel it. I'm not kidding! I want you to feel it!"
He missed all his vocal cues during "When The Music's Over," and Krieger kept trying to mask his petulant antics with washes of electronic noise. Jim came back to the microphone. "Softer, baby, softer. Gotta feel it inside. Take it deeep inside....Hey, listen. I want to give you a history of me. All right! All right! I have a few things to say, if you don't mind...I don't know where I am or how I got here, but I did." He began to recite his poems "Vast Radiant Beach" and "The Royal Sperm." He asked for a Marlboro and dozens of cigarettes landed at his feet. The band lit into "Soul Kitchen," but Jim was getting tired and wandered awaz from the microphone. He seemed to be vomiting at the side of the stage, which drew a loud burst of the applause. By the time the band lit into "Light My Fire," Jim's mind had left the building. He kept shouting, "Come on," during Ray's solo. As Robby began his, Jim was yelling as loud as he could:
"YOU KNOW I CAN'T TAKE IT! YOU KNOW THAT! I CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE! COME ON! YEAH! COME ON!"
Suddenly Jim dived into the crowd with his live microphone, and it looked like a footbal scrimmage. Fights started as he was passed over the heads of the audience, chanting the yippie yell: "DO IT! DO IT!" By the time he made it back to the stage, Jim's voice was gone and the band finished "Light My Fire" and ran off.
The kids kept chanting Jim's name but there was no necore. They started throwing chairs, wrecking the concession stands, and tearing heavy wooden doors to pieces in a wanton ritual of destruction.
The final show of that wild weekend was played at the Philadelphia arena at the Forty-sixth Market on Sunday night, August 4, and it was magnificent. Strolling onto the sweaty hockey arena's stage amid wild cheering and applause at ten-thirty, Jim appeared sober and in command; he even asked the audience to stop bothering the relatively young cops who were guarding the stage. As "Backdoor Man" bled into "Five To One," Jim bummed a beer and a cigarette from the audience. He stood back and watched as Robby played a brazen, distorted solo that soon turned into a flamenco guitar clinic on "Spanish Caravan."
"What do you want to hear? Jim asked before the last section of the show. Hundreds began shouting requests. "One at atime," Jim tried. "I can't hear you." So he recited "Texas Radio" with its preaching cadences and images of Negroes in the forest and other exotica. Then "Hello, I Love You" got a quick reading, followed by "Wake Up!" and "Light My Fire," during which Jim yelled and twitched and danced around the mike like a aman on fire. The crowd surged forward, and the cops formed a defensive perimeter, as the Doors finished the song and ran off.
The Doors took the rest of August 1968 off. Jim was obviously brain fried, and anyway Waiting For The Sun was selling on its own. Unexpectedly, this cobbled-together melange of pop tunes and art songs would be the number one album in America by early September.
Copyright © 2004
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTES according to Greg Shaw
setlist:
Introductory Instrumental (without Jim)
Back Door Man
Five To One
Break On Through
When The Music's Over
"Vast Radiant Beach"
"Dawn's Highway"
"The Royal Sperm"
When The Music's Over
Wild Child
Wake Up!
Light My Fire
The End
"Fall Down Now; Strange Gods Are Coming"
"The Sea Is Green"
"I'm coming; I hear you calling"
"The creature's nursing it's child; Leave this child alone!"
"Don't Come Here! Don't Come In!"
"Ensenada"
"The killer awoke before dawn..."
The End

Also performing: The Who; The Kangaroo
Filmed for Feast Of Friends
Promotion: Gary Kurfist & Shelley Finkel
Capacity: 17,500

Over the years there were numerous accounts of The Doors provoking riots at their performances. Some of these reports were clearly elaborate embellishments perpetrated for the express purpose of interfering with prospective performances at the venues. Other bands, such as the Jimi Hendrix Experience, found themselves engaged in the same controversy which was designed to obstruct the flourishing enterprise of live concert appearances. Wherever the truth resided, this issue raised a serious consideration: how to provide adequate security for maintaining a congenial atmosphere for all involved without arousing indignation from the audience or the performers.
At this time, however, Jim Morrison did not share the concerns surrounding their public appearances. In fact, he was intrigued by the mob mentality he had observed at their and other bands' performances. Aside from the exaggerated portraits of violence surrounding other concerts, accounts of this performance were undeniably valid. From the outset, the concert on this dreadfully hot and humid New York summer night had been plagued with difficulties. The opening band was poorly received by an unruly crowd impatient for the two main acts. It was a year before The Who's rock opera "Tommy" was released, and the band had yet to achieve legendary status in the States. Nevertheless, they were determined that the stage set-up specifically accommodate their presentation and were adamant that none of The Doors' equipment obstruct the stage. During The Who's performance, the rotating stage had broken down, leaving a section of the audience unable to adequately see the band. The Who put on a good, but not exceptional show, and exited the stage visibly annoyed. After their set, there was an hour-long interim before The Doors took the stage, and the delay further aggravated the already impatient audience.
As soon as The Doors appeared, they were greeted with a thunderous assault of screaming fans and segments of the crowd began rushing the stage. A column of policemen were stationed at the front of the platform to curtail this onrush of people, while Morrison fiercely jostled his way through them to face the crowd. The chaos escalated continuously during the performance, with fights erupting throughout the Singer Bowl. Morrison sang with a very precise and articulate emphasis on the lyrics, and actually appeared to be substantially more sober than the crowd he was facing.
Ellen Sander commented on the show's build-up in Trips: "A good portion of the audience still couldn't see and they were furious. Crowds stormed the front of the stage and were turned back by the police. Some were trying to scale the stage and others cheered them on. Morrison spun around and ground the songs out halfheartedly, ad libbing, improvising, doing an ominous dance. Hysteria was building. Morrison shrieked, moaned, gyrated, and minced to the edge of the stage, hovering. Hands reached out and grabbed him and the cops had to pry them away. The camera crew ducked a piece of broken chair which came flying onto the stage. Morrison caught it and heaved it back into the crowd. The Doors were hardly visible from any angle because there were about twenty cops onstage." (Ellen Sander, Trips, New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1973)
By the time The Doors began to perform "The End," the crowd was in an incredible uproar. Morrison vainly attempted to "sssshhhh" the audience, but there was no response and he began appealing to them. "Hey, this is serious everyone! Get quiet man! You're going to ruin the whole thing."
Following the opening stanzas of the song, Morrison drifted into a expansive passage of poetry, beginning with "Fall down now; strange Gods are coming." With decidedly steady pacing, he advanced through a series of poems until he unexpectedly burst in a scream of "Don't come here! Don't come in!" Proceeding from this flare-up into "Ensenada," Morrison was continually assailed with clamorous screams of "Morrison is King!" from the crowd. He calmly began to recite the Oedipal section of the song, but when he paused at one significant part, the audience impatiently roared the delayed lyrics "he walked on down the hallway, baby!" The crowd momentarily became quiet again, until Jim reached the conclusion of the Oedipal section with "Mother, I want to..." and the Singer Bowl burst into pandemonium with the audience finishing the lyrics. The band accelerated into the musical passage and Morrison hit the stage, writhing in agony like the death knell of a hideous serpent while the crowd went wild. The instrumental passage climaxed with a horrendous blood-curdling scream from Morrison, followed by Krieger's guitar set on some wildly unrestrained echo. By now no one remained seated in the crowd and the police were forming a barricade in front of the stage. The audience was defiantly screaming "Sit down, cop!" as Krieger finished the song with a long trail of feedback.
Just before midnight, as The Doors concluded their performance, a horde of people began demolishing the wooden seating section in front and hurling portions of the the splintered benches at the stage. The debacle turned into a complete riot when the crowd charged the police barricade, forcing The Doors to abandon the stage amidst a torrent of plummeting debris. As the police struggled to regain control of the crowd, Vince Treanor and the equipment crew desperately tried to guard and defend their gear.
Peter Townshend, lead guitar player for The Who, observed the entire disturbance from the side of the stage and was both fascinated and appalled by Morrison's apparent indifference to the situation. According to Who biographer Dave Marsh, it was Morrison's aloof and mystifying demeanor in the face of intensifying chaos that prompted Townsend to write The Who's composition "Sally Simpson."
by Greg Shaw
Copyright © 1997 The Doors On The Road
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review by Bill Tikellis
The Singer Bowl was basically an arena built from the remains of New York’s World Fair that was in existence during the 1930’s. The concert was a double bill and a crowd of 17,500 people had come to see both The Who and The Doors which had it’s problems right even before The Doors had started to play. The limousine driver had lost his way and got stuck in traffic and when The Doors finally made it to the venue, there were fans thumping the limousine. As seen on the video "Soft Parade - A Retrospective", Jim had wandered through the arena and teenage kids were hanging around him while Jim tried to ignore them as he flicked through some magazines - even the photographers backstage clung to Morrison like parasites.
There may have been some tension between both bands as The Who had apparently refused to use the same equipment as The Doors. The concert was running late as it was and to make things worse, a third act called Kangaroo was placed on the bill at the last minute and opened up the show. The disasters didn’t stop here as the revolving stage had stalled during The Who’s performance. The repair men couldn’t get the stalled stage fixed and the stage was stuck for good. This meant that 1/4 of the audience couldn’t see the remaining concert.
After The Who had played a fairly bad set and smashed up their equipment at the end of a their performance, The Doors had come on stage about half an hour later and started to play but without Jim. Finally after five minutes, Jim made it to the mike as he purposefully took his time to go on stage and was escorted by an entourage of security personnel.
The Doors started off with their medley, "Back Door Man/Five To One" but things were not settling down as the audience had difficulty seeing The Doors perform. As heard on the audience recording of this show, the crowd yelled out:
"Sit down ! Sit down ! Sit down !"
"Sit down you whore!", some one else offensively remarked.
"Sit down before I knock you down !", as one guy screamed to some one else.
"Yeah, anything you want" replied the other person.
"Come on you cunt !" the first guy took up his challenge and a scuffle broke out between the two.
The Doors played "Break On Through" and "When The Music’s Over". Jim recited some of his poems during "When The Music’s Over":
"Vast radiant beach
and a cool jewelled moon
couples naked
race down by its quiet side
and we laughed
like soft mad children
smug in the woolly cotton brains of infancy.
Indians scattered on dawn's highway bleeding
Ghosts crowd the young child's fragile eggshell mind
We leap the wall, dog and I
to hang choking on fence collar chain
Dogs lick shit
Mexican girl whore sucks my prick.
Open windows on the town
Open pores on foreign air.
The car rasps quiet.
Motor destroys itself on rotten fuel
The pump is ill.
The hose has a steel nozzle.
We . . . we want
Oh keeper of the royal sperm
Please feed the king
or the king will die"
After completing "When The Music’s Over", Jim then spoke.
"You got it ?"; whilst Robbie tuned in his guitar for the next song.
Jim then announced to the crowd:
"Never.. Never, performed before on public stage."
"Yeah", Jim added as he reasserted his statement to the crowd. The group then played "Wild Child" for the first time in front of a live audience.
Jim made it real difficult for the audience to see him perform on stage as he purposefully threw himself on the stage as he writhed and jerked around the floor like a man possessed - as seen on the video "A Feast Of Friends" and "Soft Parade - A Retrospective".
According to Elektra’s publicist, Danny Fields; "This was when he started to self-destruct. And he did it in public, turning the audience against him".
Reviews for this concert certainly did not receive any appraisals to say the least, particularly Robert Somms of the New York Free Press;
"I would characterize their current act as wearisome, exaggerated, repitious and puerile. To some that would indicate a lack of effort on my part. But Morrison (and he is the reason the Doors can walk off the stage of the singer Bowl after a casual set $25,000 richer) is basically bad theater and worse theatrics.
Beyond the grade-school prurience, the nauseating politicizing, the grotesque strut, the absurd ponts, the deliberate gestures, the unimaginative offering of himself, Morrison and the Doors aren’t just playing some songs or constructing a sound exciting or innovative in itself. They are victimized by the success of a pose they assumed."
The last song on the audience recording is "Wake Up/Light My Fire" - however according to Riordan & Prochnicky (1991), The Doors had finished off the concert with their last song, "The End". Obviously "The End" did not make it’s way on to the audience recording and would’ve been interesting to hear what exactly had taken place. The riot really erupted when supposedly Jim had grabbed his crotch with both hands as he thrusted his body towards a girl in the front row and then made an obscene comment to her. It just so happened that the girl’s boyfriend was sitting next to her and he threw a chair at Jim and the crowd went berserk. Just after midnight when the Doors had finished playing "The End", Jim gave his final scream and fell onto the stage when 200 teenagers rushed onto the stage, throwing chair legs & chairs around and smashed up the equipment. Fifteen private police men couldn’t hold back the crowd and some even made it backstage and started bashing on the dressing room door. Jim was in the dressing room and trying to comfort a girl who had a cut on her face as a chair had been thrown at her.
The riot lasted for about an hour and by the end of it all 3 people were hospitalised for minor injuries and 2 arrests were made.
Unfortunately, the recording of this concert starts to flutter during the last song, but none the less we are fairly lucky that this recording of this concert survived the chaos that occurred there that night.
Copyright © 1999
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Review by Billy Hadley
The Doors headline with opening act The Who. Jim's limo driver gets lost before the show in the traffic of the crowd and the limo is mobbed by fans. Jim gets out and the fans go crazy grabbing his clothes and hair forcing items, necklaces, etc. into his hands. He finally makes it backstage and decides to take a walk around the arena. He gets 10 yards down the hallway and is swarmed by hundreds of fans and is forced to go backstage. The Who refuses to play with The Doors equipment on stage during their set. They get there way and go on but the rotating stage gets stuck and a quarter of the restless crowd cannot see the band furiating many of the audience. They finish the set smashing their equipment and the crowd is roaring. Pete Townsend walks off telling The Doors people that the crowd is ready to explode!
The Doors wait 30 minutes and finally take the stage with Jim waiting even longer as the others jam. Jim comes out swarmed by security and his film crew. The fans who cannot see begin to storm the stage and are thwarted back by security. Jim is animated and growls songs while dancing and gyrating, hopping and twirling in a shamanic tide often rapping obscenities during breaks and between songs. The crowd is hot and Jim is in rare form. The tension builds with each song, each chant, each movement. Jim and the audience are one. He feels there emotions boiling and slowly turns up the heat. Jim throws himself down on the stage and crawls around on his belly driven by the music, the crowd, and his demons. The Doors finish with "The End" and as Jim sings the last note, falling back on the stage, the crowd as if being pulled back like an arrow, as if on cue, suddenly erupt and thunderously rush the stage. The crowd overtakes the stage and begins smashing the bands equipment. The riot rages on for over an hour with the band backstage drinking. Many fans are injured, hospitalized or arrested.
Copyright © 2006 The Doors Interactive Chronological History at www.doorshistory.com

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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

The Doors: Live Compilation (1967 & 1970) Soundboard + Aud FLAC

corrected! (sorry about my screw up)
the-doors
Avalon Ballroom/Family Dog/Winterland Arena
San Francisco, CA & Denver, CO
[Soundboard & Audience Recordings]
Tape Lineages:
Tracks 1-2 (1967-03-04 Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco):
MASTER > ANA2 > CDR > EAC > WAV > FLAC
Track 3 (1967-03-04 Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco):
"It Crawled Out Of The Vaults Of The KSAN" Bootleg > EAC > WAV > FLAC
Tracks 4-6 (1967-03-04 Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco):
Mono mixes of Tracks 1-3
Track 7 (1967-09-30 The Family Dog, Denver):
"First Flash Of Eden" Bootleg > EAC > WAV > FLAC
Track 8 (1967-09-30 The Family Dog, Denver):
Mono mix of Track 7
Track 9-10 (1970-02-06 Winterland Arena, San Francisco):
MASTER > ANA2 > CDR > EAC > WAV > FLAC

A small compilation of Doors live recordings in the best quality available.
The first three tracks are from the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco (the accepted date for these tracks is March 4, 1967 -- however, there's a chance they're actually from May 1967). The first two songs are sourced from a 2nd generation tape while "Who Do You Love" is sourced from a bootleg box set. This same version of "Who Do You Love" is often incorrectly included with copies of the March 7, 1967 Matrix show. The only change I made to "Who Do You Love" was swapping the channels to match the other two Avalon songs. Tracks 4-6 are simply mono mixes of Tracks 1-3 that I created for easier listening. It can be annoying to hear all the vocals in one channel and most of the instruments in the other. So, personally, I prefer to listen to the Avalon '67 tracks in mono and thought I'd include them as a bonus.
Track 7 is from The Family Dog in Denver (September 30, 1967) and is the best quality I've been able to track down. A version I obtained that was labelled a master clone was missing the opening and definitely had noise reduction applied to it. So it was either a bootleg source that someone tried to pass off as a low gen or an incomplete version of the master source with noise reduction applied -- either way, I'd rather circulate the "First Flash Of Eden" source as it's better quality all around and likely came from a very low gen source. The only change I made to this track was some speed-correction. The original track was 9:07 long and ran too slow. (Track 8 is simply a mono mix of Track 7.) According to Greg Shaw, who supposedly transferred the original tape, there is a possibility that the recording attributed to this date may actually be from one of The Doors' December performances at the Family Dog in 1967. Though the "First Flash Of Eden" bootleg states that this song is from The Doors appearance at the Denver University Student Union the night before (September 29, 1967), Shaw claims that this song is all that survives from an entire reel recorded at the Family Dog and that it was the last song performed that night. What leads some credence to the bootleg label, however, is that The Doors' performance at Denver University was professionally filmed for an ABC-TV special called "Bruce Morrow's Music Power." A few months later, in November 1967, ABC chose to air only one song from that night in the special. Which song did the network broadcast? "Light My Fire." To date, no recording of that television special has surfaced, leading some to wonder if this song could actually be from that program.
Rounding out this compilation are two songs from the Winterland Arena show on February 6, 1970. These come from a 2nd generation audience recording. For some reason, a lot of the versions out there of this source are cut. Thanks to "wha happened" at the Freedom Man forums, I was finally able to get a complete source with no cuts to share with everyone. So a big thank you to him for helping out with this source.
Track List:
01. Moonlight Drive - 6:57
02. Back Door Man - 5:30
03. Who Do You Love - 3:49
04. Moonlight Drive (Mono) - 6:57
05. Back Door Man (Mono) - 5:30
06. Who Do You Love (Mono) - 3:49
07. Light My Fire - 8:37
08. Light My Fire (Mono) - 8:37
09. Rock Me - 7:03
10. Carol - 1:45

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Comments welcome.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The Doors: Sunset Sound Studios 1969 (Combination Source) FLAC

rock is dead cover
February 25th (Tuesday), 1969
In The Studio - Sunset Sound, Hollywood, CA

This version has two tapes mixed into one to provide a high quality (where possible) and complete recording.
Info on the two tapes:

CD1
Version no, 1
2nd gen. cass.
all have been slightly EQ'd
all have corrected speed

CD2
Version no. 3 (RK/BB tape)
1st gen. "with Edits"

NO noise removal had been done!
(only slight EQ)

------------------------------
Track Listing Run time:71:19 (without B07-B09)
------------------------------

01. Love Me Tender => Save the whole world
02. Rock Is Dead P1
03. Woman Is A Devil
04. No impablimations...let's roll!
05. Boogie All Night Long => rap
06. No impablimations
07. Rock and Roll Woman
08. Queen of the Magazines & Madison Fragment
09. Wipe out (Ventures song)(also known as Pipeline)
10. Naked Woman (jim talking)
11. Naked Woman (jam) =>
12. Rock Me
13. Mystery train train jam (with JM Harp) => big black train
14. A little piece
15. I could not help my self
16. Rock and Roll is dead P2
17. We had some good times, but there gone!
18. The Death of Rock conclusion (JM harp)
19. final words
EXTRAS
20. Roadhouse blues vocal vamp fragment
21. seminary school (playback over bit of track)
22. talk
23. seminary school/whisky mystics...(full take)
24. Whiskey, Mystics and Men (with "petition..." intro)
(same as track before but diffrent mix)
DIFFRENT MIXES (B takes)(They are diffrent in the way they are mixed/edited. They can be used inplace of the other tracks with out creating SBEs)
25. Boogie All Night Long (not listed as a b take because it's not the same length and will create SBEs)
(same as 05 but cut out talking at the end, more 1gen pieces added and unfixed organ solo)
B 07. Rock and Roll Woman
(same as track 07 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)
B 08. Queen of the Magazines & Madison Fragment
(same as track 08 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)
B 09.Wipe out (Ventures song)(also known as Pipeline)
(same as track 09 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)

All in all, this took quite a long time (about a year or so) with many an occasion of me giving up and getting pissed off, but I am finally done with it.
I wouldn't say that this is the definitive version but I sure prefer it to what's out there, and I hope you do to.

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Comments welcome.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

The Doors: In The Studio - Sunset Sound (Now the Complete recording) FLAC

rock is dead label
February 25th (Tuesday), 1969
Hollywood, CA
This version has two tapes mixed into one to provide a high quality (where possible) and complete recording.
Info on the two tapes:
CD1
Version no, 1
2nd gen. cass.
all have been slightly EQ'd
all have corrected speed

CD2
Version no. 3 (RK/BB tape)
1st gen. "with Edits"

NO noise removal had been done!
(only slight EQ)

------------------------------
Track Listing Run time:71:19 (without B07-B09)
------------------------------

01. Love Me Tender => Save the whole world
02. Rock Is Dead P1
03. Woman Is A Devil
04. No impablimations...let's roll!
05. Boogie All Night Long => rap
06. No impablimations
07. Rock and Roll Woman
08. Queen of the Magazines & Madison Fragment
09. Wipe out (Ventures song)(also known as Pipeline)
10. Naked Woman (jim talking)
11. Naked Woman (jam) =>
12. Rock Me
13. Mystery train train jam (with JM Harp) => big black train
14. A little piece
15. I could not help my self
16. Rock and Roll is dead P2
17. We had some good times, but there gone!
18. The Death of Rock conclusion (JM harp)
19. final words
EXTRAS
20. Roadhouse blues vocal vamp fragment
21. seminary school (playback over bit of track)
22. talk
23. seminary school/whisky mystics...(full take)
24. Whiskey, Mystics and Men (with "petition..." intro)
(same as track before but diffrent mix)
DIFFRENT MIXES (B takes)(They are diffrent in the way they are mixed/edited. They can be used inplace of the other tracks with out creating SBEs)
25. Boogie All Night Long (not listed as a b take because it's not the same length and will create SBEs)
(same as 05 but cut out talking at the end, more 1gen pieces added and unfixed organ solo)
B 07. Rock and Roll Woman
(same as track 07 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)
B 08. Queen of the Magazines & Madison Fragment
(same as track 08 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)
B 09.Wipe out (Ventures song)(also known as Pipeline)
(same as track 09 but the 2gen source was mixed to mono and put to the right and the left side of the 1gen was used for the left)

All in all, this took quite a long time (about a year or so) with many an occasion of me giving up and getting p*****d off, but I am finally done with it.
I wouldn't say that this is the definitive version but I sure prefer it to what's out there, and I hope you do to.
I hope this will tide us over until (if at all) they release the full tapes.

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Comments welcome.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Doors: The Infamous Miami 1969 Show (Jim VERY Drunk) FLAC

Jim was so drunk at this show that Jim was arrested at for indecent exposure!
not the real cover
The Doors
01/MARCH/1969
Miami Dinner Theatre
Miami, Fla.
Lineage: M cassette Audience Recording > DAT master > 1G DAT > CDR > Flac > world

Setlist as best I could put together...
1. Jims intro / Backdoor Man
2. " i want some love"
3. 5 to 1
4. "love" plus "Touch me" (partial)
5. Jim > Love me two times
6. When the musics over
7. cont. > Jim commentary on change
> Away in india
8. > Jim talks to the audience
9. > "I was born here..."
10. > "we want the world..."
11. Celebration of the Lizard (intro) >
12. Light my fire
13. cont. (the sheep comes out) > Jim "I'd F*** her but..."
14. "I wanna see some action...NO LIMITS NO LAWS..."
15. end comments...

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Enjoy and THANKS FOR ALL THE SUPPORT!
Comments welcome.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The Doors: Television Bleeding (Studio and TV Audio Rips) shn

http://www.bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=ard01§ion=12
ard01-front
Tracks 1-7 are alternate studio mixes, done by Paul Rothchild during the prosuction of "The Best of the Doors" Quadrodisc.
Tracks 8-11 recorded live for TV broadcast ("Beat Club", Bremen, Germany) on May 3, 1972.
Source: original audio-cd > wav (eac) > shn (mkwACT)

01. Hello I Love You (no drums, no second vocal overdub) - 2:18
02. People Are Strange (no drums, no guitar solo, no second vocal overdub) - 2:04
03. Love Her Madly (no reverb, no drums, no echo on voice) - 3:09
04. Love Me Two Times (no tambourine, no guitars) - 3:08
05. Riders On The Storm (no second vocal overdub, no echo, no drums) - 6:13
06. Touch Me (no drums) - 3:03
07. Soul Kitchen (different bass sound) - 3:22

08. Tightrope Ride - 4:08
09. In The Eye Of The Sun - 5:06
10. I'm Horny, I'm Stoned - 4:57
11. Love Me Two Times - 4:49
12. Verdilac - 6:17
13. Ships w/ Sails (false start) - 1:15
14. Ships w/ Sails - 9:46

Review from a Doors fansite:
"Snakeskin Records is a new firm producing Live CDs. Their trademark is their high quality of both recording and cover. Their latest CD is this new Doors disc. On it you find different rough studio mixes in perfect stereo, which had been done for the rare Doors Quadro vinyl album The Best Of The Doors. I find it very interesting to listen to these, sometimes you have the feeling of listening to totally new recordings. But they are absolutely the same as on the albums but in different mixes. Anyway, have you ever heard Riders On The Storm without the whispering and without drums? And People Are Strange without drums and guitar solo? Both open whole new categories of listening experiences. All songs with Morrison are in excellent stereo. You won't believe your ears!
The second recording is one of the rare 1972 studio performances. The Doors are having a lot of fun in the studio, which makes a great listening. They play their standard material of their 1972 tour through Western Europe. This concert is presented in good mono; studio noises between the songs have unfortunately been cut.
See the cover - a beautiful rare Morrison photo. In general - a CD featuring totally new and unpublished material with a superb cover sheet (yes, yes, the beautiful rare photo of Jim, all girls will love this!).
Recommended!"

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Comments always welcome.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

The Doors: Cleveland, Ohio 1968 (Aud) FLAC

c030868
August 3, 1968 (Saturday)
Cleveland Public Auditorium
[Fair Audience Recording]
Master Reel > ANA1 > CDR > EAC > WAV > Flac Frontend > FLAC (lvl 8, SBE aligned)

A 1st gen audience recording. Jim is pretty drunk for this show and has a lot of fun with the audience. Unlike in Miami, he doesn't berate the crowd, but does threaten to kill someone if his monitors aren't turned up as "Five To One" starts. "Hey listen, if I can't hear myself a little bit louder than that, I'm just gonna quit, go out, and kill some people! C'mon!" The band keeps vamping but Jim continues to playfully talk with the audience. After over six minutes of banter he asks, "What song are we singing?" and finally begins the lyrics to "Five To One." After a surprisingly tight version of "When The Music's Over," the band goes into "Soul Kitchen" and during the song's second verse, Jim misses his cue. Toward the end of the song, the band realizes that Jim isn't interested in finishing the lyrics and they break into "Light My Fire." By the end of the concert, Jim is incoherent and screaming more and more until he finally jumps into the audience. He manages to get back onstage (with the help of a number of stage hands) and barely finishes "Light My Fire" before leaving the stage. At the very end of the tape, you can hear the house announcer ask the audience for Jim's coat. ("Has anyone seen Jim Morrison's coat?") Definitely an interesting night as far as Doors shows go. Only wish we had a better quality recording. Enjoy.
link to art:http://www.bootlegzone.com/album.php?name=C030868§ion=12

Track List:
01. House Announcer - 3:44
02. Break On Through - 5:27
03. Back Door Man - 2:41
04. Five To One - 11:15
05. When The Music's Over - 17:54
06. What Do You Wanna Hear? - 2:20
07. Soul Kitchen - 6:22
08. Light My Fire - 8:38
09. Thank You For Coming - 1:49

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Monday, September 29, 2008

The Doors: Dallas, Texas 1970 (Aud) FLAC

d090768-front
not the cover
12/11/1970
State Fair Music Hall
Lineage: M cassette Audience Recording > DAT master(GS) > 1G DAT(me) > CDR > Flac > world

1. intro
2. Love Her Madly
3. Backdoor Man
4. Ship of Fools
5. The Changling
6. Intro
7. LA Women
8. When The Music Is Over

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

The Doors: TV Eye 1967-1969 (Soundboard*) FLAC

by request!
04950257_covout
(Flash 04-95-0257, Flashback)
1967-1969
*TV broadcasts
Technical: Lineage: Silver CD > EAC(secure) > TLH
Source: Flash 04-95-0257 Boot > ...

Setlist:
01. Tell All The People 3:36
02. Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar) 1:40
03. Back Door Man 4:21
04. Wishful Sinful 2:58
05. Build Me A Woman 4:15
06. Petition The Lord > The Soft Parade 10:00
07. The End 12:14
08. Moonlight Drive 6:52
09. Back Door Man 5:29
10. Light My Fire 2:55
11. Moonlight Drive 3:03

ORIGINAL NOTES:
---------------------
Tracks 1 - 6 US TV "Critique" 1969-05-23
Track 7 US TV "Now Explosion" 1967------
Tracks 8 & 9 Avalon Ballroom, San Francisco 1967-04-15
Tracks 10 & 11 US TV "Smothers Brothers" 1967------

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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The Doors & Eddie Vedder: Keep The Fire Alive (Soundboard) FLAC

Keepthefirealive
("Hawk" Label)
Eddie Vedder - Vocals
Ray Manzarek - Keyboards
Robby Krieger - Guitar
John Densmore - Drums
LINEAGE: Silver CD > EAC > WAV > FLAC [Level 8]
Tracklist:
01. Light My Fire #1
02. Light My Fire #2
03. Roadhouse Blues #1
04. Roadhouse Blues #2
05. Roadhouse Blues #3
06. Light My Fire #3
07. Light My Fire #4
08. Roadhouse Blues #4
09. Break On Through #1
10. Light My Fire #5
11. Roadhouse Blues #5
12. Break On Through #2
13. Light My Fire #6

TRACKS 01-10 Power Plant Studio 11th January 1993 (REHEARSALS)
TRACKS 11-13 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame 12th January 1993 (PERFORMANCE)

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thanks for the visit!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

The Doors: Live in Vancouver 1970 (Pre-FM) FLAC

JIM%2BALBERT3 for photo credit see comments
PNE Coliseum
1970-06-06 (recording date)
1992-07-04 (broadcast date) Westwood One Radio Networks (Superstar Concert Series #92-27)
PreFM
Technical: Lineage: Silver > EAC (secure) > TLH
Source: Westwood One Radio Networks Silver > ...
(I uploaded this CONCERT before but this source is different and includes commentray not found on the previous post).

Setlist:
disc 1:
01. announcer Jim Ellis; several national commercials [10:15]
"Roadhouse Blues"
02. commentary; commercials [10:58]
"Back Door Man", "Five to One (medley)"
03. commentary; commercials [14:36]
"When The Music's Over"

disc 2:
04. commentary; commercials [16:22]
"Little Red Rooster"; "Who Do You Love?";
05. commentary; commercials [20:32]
"Petition The Lord" (poem); "Light My Fire" (jam);
06. commentary; commercials [17:43]
"The End"

Notes from uploader:
I bought this somewhere in Manchester, NH in 1995 or 1996...I extracted with EAC(secure) and encoded to flac(7) with TLH v1190, I did not perform mp3 or SB checks as these are pre-broadcast silvers.
1970-06-06 Vancouver, BC, Canada; Jim jams w/ Albert King who is introduced at the end of d2t01..sad that only 13 months later, Jim would die mysteriously in Paris.
I did not edit out the commercials or commentary, i believe shows in this format should be shared in their entirety. note that commentary and commercials both precede and proceed any listed tracks.

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comments always appreciated!

Monday, April 7, 2008

The Doors: Danbury High School Auditorium 1967 (shn)

Free Image Hosting at allyoucanupload.com

October 11, 1967 (Wednesday)
Danbury High School Auditorium
Danbury, Connecticut
[PA System Recording]
no artwork
Master 7" Reel (3.75 ips) > Reel To Reel > DAT(2) > CDR > EAC > WAV > Flac Frontend > FLAC (lvl 8, SBE aligned)

Here is a first generation recording of The Doors' appearance at Danbury High in 1967. Contrary to popular belief, this show wasn't put on for or by the high school, but by Western Connecticut State College as an opening to their Fall Weekend. Much of the crowd is actually made up of college students and Danbury residents.
Unlike other circulating sources, there is very little tape hiss present on this version. There are also no cuts during "Break On Through" -- though there is still a missing verse during "Moonlight Drive" which seems to be on all known copies. "The End" is complete along with Jim's introduction.

Track List:
01. Introduction - 0:59
02. Moonlight Drive - 6:29
03. Money - 3:40
04. Break On Through - 6:11
05. Back Door Man - 4:41
06. People Are Strange - 2:49
07. The Crystal Ship - 3:02
08. Wake Up - 1:44
09. Light My Fire - 8:57
10. The End - 19:37

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link to artwork (compliments of Alejandro):
http://www.excitement-soon-unfolds.com/111067b.html

comments always welcome!

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

The Doors: Jim's Alive (The Ultimate Seattle Tapes) 1970 (Soundboard) FLAC

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Tuff Bites TB.94.1009, 1994
1970-06-05, Center Coliseum, Seattle
lineage: sliver CD -> xACT -> Flac (8) (xACT)
quality: EX SBD

Hitler (Poem) 2:23
Roadhouse Blues 4:52
Backdoor Man 7:28
When The Music's Over 20:06
Someday Soon 4:18
Train Jam I (Incl. People Get Ready / Baby Please Don't Go) 7:14
Train Jam II (Incl. Mystery Train / Crossroads) 20:18
Five To One 6:03
Break On Through 5:16

from the cover:
"This is the complete recorded show, taped in Seattle on Jun 5th, 1970 for radio broadcast. The encore "Wake Up/Light my fire" was not taped. All the previous CD releases of this concert were taken from the edited radioshow, containing two songs from the Doors' Toronto Pop festival '69 appearance and a cut-down-to-a-few-minutes version of "Train Jam". This CD contains, published for the first time, the unedited tapes."
enjoy!

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