ARTAUD ROCK: DARK
LOGIC OF THE DOORS
by Bill Kerby
1967
Ray sat at his
electric organ,
head bowed, just looking at the keys. John made a last-minute
adjustment
on his snare drum, and Robbie, looking like
Robert Mitchum's electric son, twisted dials
on his amp and tuned softly. Finally, after an unbearable wait, Robbie
began, then John, and finally Ray.
The introduction over and over, evolving, complex,
swelling. Kaleidoscope was sold out. Ciro's was packed and all the
people
in the Western Hemisphere were wedged around the stage, waiting,
craning
around
anxiously, recognizing the introduction.
And there he was; a gaunt,
hollow Ariel from hell, stumbling in slow motion through the drums.
Robbie
turned to look with mild disgust but Jim
Morrison was oblivious. Drifting, still you could
have lit matches off the look he gave the audience. There was a mild
tremor
of excited disbelief as he
dreamed that he went to his microphone. Morrison's
clothes looked like he had slept in them since he was twelve and he
just
hung there on the
microphone, slack. Just for a flash, his beautiful
child's face said it was all a lie. All the terror, all the drugs, all
the evil. Gone! The unhuman sound he
made into the microphone, turned the carping
groupies to stone. And in the tombed silence he began to sing;
alternately
caressing, screaming, terraced
flights of poetry and music, beyond visceral.
For an hour on that Friday
night, a modern American pop group called The Doors got right out on
the
edge and stayed there. And because they are
great and because the edge is where artists produce
the best, there occured a major black miracle.
The founder of the Theater-of-Cruelty, Antonin
Artaud, poet-actor, described one of his infrequent scenarios thus:
"eroticism,
savagery, bloodlust, a
thirst for violence, an obsession with horror,
collapse of moral values, social hypocrisy, lies, sadism, perjury,
depravity,
etc." To anyone who has
ever listened to The Doors at any length, this
will appear to be a catalog of their material, but that's just a part
of
the whole. This context of Artaud is
more than their ornamental design, more than
a convenient rubric into which they stuff their music. Among their
contemporaries,
The Doors are going
somewhere different.
Vaguely (pleased, disappointed:
choose one) at his survival, Western man has begun to look inside to
see
what went wrong, what went right, and to
see if they were ever the same thing. Order and
chaos have new levels of meaning so that today a flogging can have as
much
validity in art as an act of
amative love. And The Doors know it. This kind
of irrationality is beyond dreams or madness and their songs shock and
do not tell logical stories. At
the end of a good set, the evil magic is out,
and Morrison holds the only match in the Stygian darkness. Help-
lessly,
you hope he won't decide to
blow it out.
It is possible to go through
so many changes when listening to The Doors, that a beautiful,
exhilarating
dream and a nightmare can be the same. "I
would not try to excuse obvious incoherence by
mitigating it with dreams. Dreams have something more than their own
logic.
They have their own
existence, in which nothing but dark and intelligent
truths appear." (Artaud, Morrison: choose one)
The Doors are four men who
are together; their vision is realised by all of them. But it is
Morrison
whom the audience watches. They are attracted to
him with the same abivalence that drives us to
feast on calamity. Our perverse nature is undeniable when we look upon
things we fear the most. We
cringe and die a little inside, unable to take
our eyes away while evil and death dance nearer and nearer to our petty
conception of immortality. But
James Douglas Morrison bathes luxuriously in
it. He moves on stage, dancing with an indifferent, expressionless
attitude
or seized with paroxysmal
anger, his face convulsed with a splendid fury.
He has more natural disdain, more utter contempt for his surroundings
than
anyone I have ever known.
But when he stands, throttling his microphone,
staggering blindly across the stage, electric, on fire, screaming, his
is all there, waiting, daring,
terrified, and alone.
And digging it.