Before you slip into unconsciousness
I'd like to have another kiss
Another flashing chance at bliss
Another kiss, another kiss
The days are bright and filled with pain
Enclose me in your gentle rain
The time you ran was too insane
We'll meet again, we'll meet again
Oh tell me where your freedom lies
The streets are fields that never die
Deliver me from reasons why
You'd rather cry, I'd rather fly
The crystal ship is being filled
A thousand girls, a thousand thrills
A million ways to spend your time
When we get back, I'll drop a line
Rhino's new three disc collection LIVE IN BOSTON features two complete sets
from Friday April 10, 1970 at the Boston Arena and captures the moment just
before the Doors turned their mystical psych circus into a full blown blooze
review. As a historical document, LIVE IN BOSTON is unflinching, presenting a
decidedly warts-and-all view across 46 tracks. With Ray Manzarek's
polychromatic organ, Robbie Krieger's no-frills guitar lines, and Jon
Densmore's Latin-inflected percussion, the band ably follows Morrison through
every far-flung inspiration. The covers are many, as an epic "Light My Fire"
alone touches upon "Fever," "Summertime," and "St. James Infirmary Blues"
before returning to its familiar chorus. The show, of course, belongs to
Morrison who seems stuck between shaman-poet and Brechtian comic instigator.
Indeed one of the primary attractions of LIVE IN BOSTON is the banter. With
more skits than an Outkast record--including idiotic stoner ramblings,
inspired period pieces, and wry self-parodies--this set proves that even at
his most bloviated, Morrison could be an inspired and often hilarious
performer who knew how to push a crowd's buttons. It was worth the price of
admission for Doors fans in 1970 and given the staid contemporary relationship
between rock performers and audiences, it still resonates today.
The following is a listing of the tracks on
various Doors LP's:
MORRISON MOTEL:
Road House Blues, Waiting for the Sun, You Make me
Real, Peace Frog, Blue Sunday, Ship of Fools, Land Ho!, The Spy,
Queen of the Highway, Indian Summer, Maggie M'Gill.
Even
after the passing of lead singer Jim Morrison (July 3 1971) the doors to
this day have a ever increasing appeal to a whole new generation of
music listeners.
Most of the songs( music & lyrics) written where compositions of Morrison and
Krieger but the band all assisted creating rock and rolls long standing
anthems of the late 60's and early 70's..
The doors greatest rock and roll band ever, even if you buy vinyl
records, sheet music, CD's, DVDs and MP3 music. This music will last
forever.