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TIME Quote of the Year: "Longevity
has it's place. But I'm not concerned about that right now. I want
to do God's will and he's allowed me to go up to the mountain, and I've
looked over and I've seen the Promised Land"
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on
April 3, 1968 giving a speech in Memphis, TN, the night before his assassination
Legend: (DU)
= Date Unknown, Date/Playlist,
EVENT,
Review,
Timeline,
Link,
Quote,
Poetry/Lyrics
Tue. Jan. 2nd: This
was to be the date of Jim's court hearing from the New Haven incident had
the charges not been withdrawn.
Fri. Jan. 19th - Sat. 20th: Carousel
Theater - West Covina, CA
On the first night, Jim is
full of energy, as he usually is after a lengthy break, repeatedly crashing
down onto the stage and jumping back up to shout out the songs throughout
the evening. On the next night, Jim is just the opposite and the
performance suffers due to his ever increasing intakes. Also performing:
The Sunshine Company (both nights)
J I M G E T S A R R E S T E D
Mon. Jan. 29th: The
Pussy Cat A Go Go - Las Vegas, NV
Jim taunts a security guard
in the parking lot by pretending to smoke a joint. Guards rush Morrison
and his friends, Bob Gover, author of The $100 Misunderstanding
and a journalist from the New York Times and beat them. When
Las Vegas police arrive, they arrest Morrison and charge him with vagrancy,
public drunkenness, and failure to possess sufficient identification, also
taking in Grover. Grover later writes an article entitled "A Hell
of a Way to Peddle Poems" detailing the event. Grover sums it up
by calling it a classic example of the way Jim attracted trouble:
Thur. Feb. 1st: Universal
Studios offers The Doors $500,000 to be featured in an undisclosed motion
picture. They do not accept the offer but remain open for negotiations
in the future.
Sat. 10th: Berkeley
Community Theater (promo) -
Berkeley, CA
The Doors play an early 7:30 P.M. show and a 10:00
P.M. show opened by Iron Butterfly. Jim departs from the set list
and recites poetry tonight. There is a good chance that some of it
is from "Celebration of The Lizard".
Sat. Feb. 17th: Veterans
Memorial Coliseum - Phoenix, AZ
A bomb threat during sound
check requires everyone to exit the building. The Doors then go on
as scheduled and give a great performance. Also performing The Sunshine
Company and Hamilton Street Car.
T H E D O O R S B E G I N R E C O R D I N G W A I T I N G F O R T H E S U N
Mon. Feb. 19th - Tue. 20th: In
The Studio (pics)
The Doors go into T.T.G. Recording
Studios in Hollywood, newly equipped with state of the art 16-track recording
capabilities, and begin recordings for their third album Waiting For
The Sun.
On
the first day, "The Celebration of the Lizard"
and spontaneity are the order of the day and the band, full of high spirits
and diligence, tackles production of this crucial arrangement which is
to cover one side of the album. (Remember: we're still talking about a
vinyl LP)
On
the 2nd day, The Doors again concentrate their
energies on "The Celebration of the Lizard" and are again pleased with
the results. However, the band pays so much attention to the small
details and intricacies of the piece they lose the overall cohesiveness
and it lacks the smooth transitions from part to part that is essential
to the orchestration of the piece. The Doors are dissatisfied with
the overall feel, especially the perfectionist Paul Rothchild, and the
piece is in jeopardy of making the cut. Jim however is satisfied
with the piece but loses the argument to technical aspects. He and
the others like the feel but the song does not seem structured strongly
enough to make it on a professional record.
Early March: In
the studio
Producer Paul Rothchild is
becoming evermore the perfectionist demanding take after take and the sessions
are going awry right from the beginning. Jim is very uninterested
in the process of recording and with his constant drinking and partying
he is becoming very unreliable and quite creatively unproductive.
He has somewhat taken an 'I don't care' attitude and after his masterpiece
"The Celebration" is rejected he withdraws and rebels. It takes over
130 attempts to get "The Unknown Soldier" recorded to Paul's high standards.
John Densmore gets fed up with everything and quits but returns the next
day.
Ray and Robby sense that something
needs to be done about Jim. They talk to Paul and decide to hire
someone to keep an eye on Jim while out drinking to make sure he gets to
the studio and to upcoming gigs on time. Paul suggests they hire
Bobby Neuwirth, a former roadie with Bob Dylan's band, who can think and
drink on a par with Jim, to pose as a film maker. Elektra pays half
of Neuwirth's salary and John, Ray and Robby pitch in on the other half.
Jim quickly figures out what is going on but plays along for awhile.
Neuwirth soon figures out there is no one that can stop Jim from drinking
and joins him in bars all over town drinking and partying while giving
Jim a companion to talk film with or to relate and bounce ideas off of
while they're out and about. He becomes more of a drinking partner
than an overseer and coordinator.
The recording sessions are
getting worse and worse. Jim often keeps the others waiting for hours
and hours and blows his chance to get his masterpiece "Celebration of The
Lizard" on the record. It was supposed to cover one entire side of
the LP but is too disjointed musically and with Jim's attitude in the studio
it never comes to fruition. The Doors do make a version Jim likes
but the others disagree with him. Upset, he leaves for a few
hours returns extremely drunk, lowers the lights and goes into the recording
booth completely plastered and sings the take of "Five To One". (If
you listen closely to the part at the end of the song where he says: "Hey
come on honey...(swig)... go along home and wait for me baby and I'll be
there in just a little while..." you can hear him take a swig of his bottle
of Brandy.)
Jim, feeling the pressures
of having to come up with new material, often while in the studio, is drinking
more and more. Jim takes off whenever he feels, often frequenting
the local taverns, and invites all kinds of party goers and groupies back
to the studio. John can't take it anymore and quits again.
Robby after a few days talks him into to coming back and on the road with
the band.
Though the album is nowhere
near finished it is time to release a single. "The Unknown Soldier"/
"We Could Be So Good Together" single is released. Many radio stations
avoid playing the song due to its war anthem. To promote the single,
Elektra produces a short film climaxing with Jim getting shot while bound
to a pole on the beach.
J I M , J A N I S & J I M I
Wed. Mar. 6th or Thu. 7th: Steve
Paul's Scene - NYC (DU)
The
Scene is well known for having musicians show up and jam with whoever happens
to be playing that night. Musicians are engaging in improvisational
jams together learning and feeding of one another's vibe, often late night
and after-hours, which Jimi Hendrix particularly takes an interest in whenever
he's in town. He has lately begun to lug around an open-reel Ampex
recorder so not to miss the potential magical happenings during one of
his long totally improvisational jams.
On this night, Jim Morrison,
Jimi Hendrix, and Janis Joplin are in the club. Hendrix is on stage
jamming with a group of musicians playing drums, bass, and second guitar.
Jim, during one of the bluesier jams and heavily intoxicated, jumps up
on stage and begins to wail some very obscene lyrics. As the song
progresses Jim doesn't. He soon collapses on the stage grabs Hendrix
by the ankles and then clumsily drags himself away knocking a table of
drinks over into Janis's lap! She retaliates "I wouldn't mind...
if he could sing". Hendrix is not impressed by Jim's behavior and
a little upset. He later, on April 4th, adamantly denies a request
by Morrison to join him on stage in Montreal at the Suave Arena.
Fri. Mar. 15th: Colgate
University - Starr Hockey Rink - Hamilton, NY
The Doors open with "Break
on Through" and Jim's microphone is not working properly. The band
continues to play and not until the next song, "Backdoor Man", is the microphone
fixed. Despite the small technical difficulty the band does an outstanding
show highlighted by Krieger's great leads. Also performing:
Linda Rondstadt and The Stone Poneys
Sat. Mar. 16th: Eastman
Theater - Rochester, NY
Also performing: Linda Rondstadt
and The Stone Poneys
Sun. Mar. 17th: The
Back Bay Theater (promo) - Boston, MA
The Doors show up two hours
late to an early 4:00 p.m. show and the promoters, once notified, save
the day by adding a couple local bands to this evening's agenda.
They continue to placate the crowd by coming over the loud speaker throughout
Linda Rondstadt and The Stone Poneys performance and announcing that The
Doors are on their way. After the under bills the promoters fill
space, still waiting for the band, with Doors promotional movies of
"The Unknown Soldier" and "Break on Through" to a raving audience even
though the controversial "Unkown Soldier" was banned from airplay on Boston's
radio stations! The crowd likes the controversial movie so much they
demand an encore and are obliged followed by the promoters who are now
going around the theater with a live microphone getting responses from
the crowd on the movie.
In the meantime, The Doors
equipment has been set on stage and the band comes out playing an enthusiastic
"Break on Through" to a roaring crowd. Jim, however, takes his time
making his way onto the stage and appears totally unaware of the crowds
enduring wait and seems bored in performing yet another concert.
Throughout the evening he is very dull and just go through the motions
until doing a stupid and sarcastic Boston accent on the show's final song
"Light My Fire".
The Doors, thank goodness,
do two shows this evening and their second at 9:30 p.m. is a total make-up
for the lack luster early performance in which Jim was probably a little
tired since arriving late, going right to the stage, and knowing he had
another show to do. During this late performance Jim is amazingly
penetrating with his screams, theatrics, and typical mysticism that he
can portray by his presence alone. He is at his best tonight doing
his thing like nobody else can but only, as seen tonight, when he wants
or when he feels like doing it! Morrison magically blends several
song's lyrics and throws in moving poetry pieces that are right on and
heartfelt.
T H E D O O R S H E A D L I N E T H E N E W F I L L M O R E E A S T
Fri. Mar. 22nd - Sat. 23rd: Fillmore
East (pics and promos) - New York, NY
The Doors headline Bill Graham's
new Fillmore East, formerly the Village Theater which opened on March 8th.
The Doors do four performances in the two days and sell out the 2,500 seat
auditorium at $5.00 a piece each show. The concerts are spectacular
and some of the band's all-time best! The band does the entire "Celebration
of The Lizard" mesmerizing crowds and The Doors receive stellar reviews.
In the early show on Friday,
giving his all and extremely stoned, Jim falls into the lighting pit!
Later during the same performance, Jim introduces the New York premiere
of The Unknown Soldier by pretending to be a college professor
and asking the "class" to pay close attention to the movie because afterward
there will be an exam. After the movie they play "The Unknown Soldier"
followed by what is possibly the first full length rendition of "The Celebration
of The Lizard".
In the late show on Friday,
The Doors open with "When The Music's Over" in which Jim, seemingly absent,
comes flying over the drum kit and leaping down in front of the microphone
just in time to scream the opening and signals the beginning of what is
to be a totally outstanding show.
In the early show on Saturday,
the audiences on their way to the Fillmore has picked a considerable amount
of daffodils and throughout the show they are flung onto the stage.
Jim picks some up and methodically places a few on each members instrument
and between songs seemingly picks on John by placing many on his drums
and under his nose in an attempt to get him going.
In the opening number of the
second show on saturday, Jim holds onto the rising curtain to the point
of maximum safe height and even a little more before letting go at the
very last second soaring down right in front of the microphone in perfect
timing to open the show with his characteristic introductory scream.
The band plays The Unknown Soldier and follows it up with live performances
of the song during each show this evening and do "Celebration" again during
the late show. After saturday's late show The Doors are in such a
good mood they tell Bill Graham they want to do another encore. Graham
comes out on stage as the audience is filing out and asks them if they
want some more, which they graciously accept, and the band ends up playing
another entire set lasting over an hour. What a magical weekend this
must have been!
F E A S T O F F R I E N D S P R O D U C T I O N B E G I N S
Late March: In The Studio and
Feast
of Friends
The Doors begin searching through Jim's tattered
notebooks for poetry that can be made into songs or song pieces due to
the scrapping of "The Celebration of The Lizard" which was to cover one
entire half of the vinyl album.
The Doors begin production on a documentary (later
to be called Feast of Friends). Bobby
Neuwirth, bodyguard/ film maker, has departed but not before making a short
film
Not To Touch The Earth. Similar to this attempt, the
documentary is to be made up of behind-the-scenes footage and concert pieces.
The first taping will be on April 13th and production will end on September
1st just before heading off on their European Tour. The
band spends $20,000.00 on equipment and a crew. Three associates
of the band are hired as a production crew:
Paul Ferrara - Director of Photography
(goes from 16mm b/w, then to color later)
Babe Hill - Sound Recording
(a Nagra reel-to-reel portable is used)
Frank Lisciandro -
Editor
Speaking of film, Jim begins to receive
movie roles of his own from major studios.
Wed. Mar. 27th: Hotel Diplomat
- NYC
The Doors are invited to attend "The Group Image
Show". The band not only shows up but also shows The Unknown Soldier
to a delighted crowd.
Fri. Mar. 29th: The
Kaleidoscope (pics) - Hollywood, CA
The Kaleidoscope has just
opened on the 22nd and are still celebrating their "grand opening".
The Doors play to 1,500 in a lively atmosphere tonight, which part of was
filmed by an independent filmmaker. This location will unfortunately
be sold a year later due to financial reasons and renamed the Aquarius
Theater. It will be here in July 1969 that the band begins their
comeback after the Miami incident which lead to numerous cancellations
and the end of their Spring Tour.
T H E D O O R S O P E N T H E I R O F F I C E & H I R E B I L L S I D D O N S A N D D A N N Y S U G E R M A N
The Doors spend time in the
studio early in the month. The Doors ask for an advance from Elektra
and buy out their management team. They hire Bill Siddons, only 19,
as manager, technician Vince Treanor is
promoted into their new road manager, and Leon Bernard becomes acting assistant.
The Doors decide to pay themselves each equal salaries of a few thousand
dollars a month splitting the rest at the end of the year after expenses.
The Doors also decide to open
their own office at 8512 Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood where
Jim soon crashes often. They convert an old antique store into offices
on the second floor and a rehearsal room on the first. Danny
Sugerman, 13, helps the band move in and swindles his way into a job
as a gofer and soon answering Jim's mail.


James Earl Ray shoots and kills Rev. King on the
balcony of the Larraine Hotel in Memphis, TN. Rioting breaks out
in over 100 cities. Ray is not arrested for the shooting until June
8th, 1968 in a London airport later pleading guilty and receiving 99 years
in prison.
----------------------------------------------------
F I R S T C O N C E R T I S F I L M E D F O R F E A S T O F F R I E N D S
Sat. Apr. 13th: Santa
Rosa Fairgrounds - Santa Rosa, CA (First
concert shoot for Feast Of Friends)
This is the first on-location
shooting for the Feast Of Friends documentary, hey there's
a great trivia question! The crew will shoot for 5 months, film 15
shows, and end on September 1st in Saratoga Springs, NY.
Wed. Apr. 17th: The
Riverside Auditorium - Riverside, CA
Fri. Apr. 19th: Westbury
Music Fair (pics, promo & review) - Long Island, NY (Feast
Of Friends)
The
doors do an early 3:00 p.m. show and a later show tonight. The early
show's crowd is sparse in attendance and the band is less than enthusiastic
in performing to such a small crowd at an unlikely early time slot but
the late show goes crazy!
Wed. Apr. 24th:
Kaleidoscope - Los Angeles, CA
Fri. Apr. 26th: The
Whisky - Los Angeles, CA (DU)
During this time in
L.A., Jim while watching The Ohio Express at The Whisky one night, jumps
up on stage, grabs the microphone, and sticks it down his pants upsetting
the band.
Thu. May 2nd: Civic Arena -
Pittsburgh, PA
Fri. May 3rd - Thu. 9th: In
the Studio
The Doors spend this week
in the Sunset Studio recording Waiting For The Sun.
Fri. May 10th: The
Chicago Coliseum (pics) -
Chicago,
IL.
Jim, refreshed and roaring
to go, incites a riot this night escaping through the backstage door while
the crowd of 4,000 destroys the stage. During the 8:30 p.m. show
one teen gets so excited he does a swan dive off the balcony. Jim
is now pushing every button, raising every level as far as they will go,
both personally and professionally, just to see what will happen.
Also performing: The Shady Daze; The One-Eyed Jacks
Sat. May 11th: Cobo
Arena - Detroit, MI (Feast Of Friends)
Also performing: The James
Cotton Blues Band; Jagged Edge; The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
Sun. May 12th: The
Exhibition Hall - Toronto, Ontario (Feast
Of Friends - insufficient lighting)
The
sound system tonight is inadequate and the crowd is infused with an uneasiness
relating to Morrison's off and on microphone problems in which the audience
hears only some of the lyrics to their favorite songs. Also performing:
Earth Opera; City Muffin Boys; The Influence
J I M C U T S H I S O W N H A I R A N D C A U S E S A M E D I A F R E N Z Y
Mon. May 13th - Fri. 17th:
In the Studio
The Doors return to L.A. and
continue recording Waiting For The Sun at Sunset Studios.
During this week, after hearing so much about the length of his hair,
Jim chooses to cut it himself. When people find out he cut his own
hair everybody wants to know how short. Just cutting his hair is
major news. Jim cannot do anything without someone writing or reading
into his every move twisting his actions into political events and anti
anything agendas.
Sun. May 19th: Northern
California Folk-Rock Festival (pics, poster - CHECK
OUT THE NEW HAIRCUT) - Family Park,
Santa Clara County Fairgrounds - San Jose, CA (Feast
Of Friends)
The outdoor venue does nothing
for The Doors magic and the show is lack luster. The Doors are scheduled
to close this two-day event with a one hour set at 4:30 p.m. on Sunday.
They come onto the stage after a long day of music and at least ten other
bands had played before them. The crowd was a little tired and the
band playing in the middle of the afternoon made for a less than outstanding
performance that just wasn't received with much enthusiasm. Also
performing during the two-day event: The Grateful Dead; The Animals; Big
Brother and The Holding Company; the Youngbloods; the Electric Flag; Jefferson
Airplane; Kaleidoscope; Country Joe and the Fish; Taj Mahal; and many other
lesser known bands.
Fri. May 24th: Hi-Corbett Field
Baseball Stadium - Randolph Park, Tucson, AZ "Happening #2"
This is The Doors second appearance here, the first
being on May 6th, 1967. After two songs Jim asks the kids in the
front row for a cigarette and the stage is soon bombarded by lit cigarettes.
The band later goes into "Break on Through" and then the power in the stadium
goes out and everything in the whole place goes dark! The
power soon comes back on but the only light in operation is the main spotlight.
Later Jim begins twirling the microphone during "When The Music's Over"
and just misses Ray's head. He then points out people in the audience
during the finale of "Light My Fire" yelling at them to come up on stage.
The security on-hand makes a barricade in front of the stage but are soon
overtaken and audience members surround the stage while Jim finishes the
performance sandwiched between security guards. Review:
"A
hushed 'Here they come' ran through the crowd and necks craned expectantly
towards the small gate outside the right field foul line. The three
Doors' musicians...mounted the stage looking all business. They positioned
themselves with their instruments and immediately started playing.
After a short musical introduction, singer-warlock Jim Morrison, wearing
skin-tight leather pants, a pea coat and a sullen expression, leaped up
the side stairs, faked a spastic stumble crossing the stage, and lurched
into the lyrics in a slightly hoarse voice. it is undeniably compelling.
The creative nature of the Doors' musicianship became more apparent with
every song. Their versatility with the instruments and their unique
rapport in the tight arrangements provided a perfect backdrop for Morrison's
jolting images...the whole situation began to take on an atmosphere of
unreality." (Greg Robertson, "Teeners' verdict
on The Doors: GROOVY," Tucson Daily Citizen, June 29, 1968)
Sat. May 25th: Lagoon
Park Patio Gardens - Farmington, Salt Lake City, UT
The Doors play an early and
late show to very sparse and unexpectedly small audiences. During
the first show Jim asks the crowd - "Where the hell is everyone" and later
"Are you all dead out there? What did you come here for anyway?".
The Doors only play four songs in the early show and the late show is just
as disappointing. People even began to leave during the first show
after Jim challenged them to show a little enthusiasm. During "When
The Music's Over", Jim even expounds on the line "We're getting tired of
hangin' around" in the early show. This is the second time The Doors
played Salt Lake City - Farmington, and their last!
Late May:
The Doors finally finish The Waiting For The Sun recording sessions
and turn their attention to film.
Sun. May 26th: Pershing
Municipal Auditorium - Lincoln, NE (DU)
This
concert may or may not have taken place.
T H E D O O R S R E L E A S E " H E L L O I L O V E Y O U " - " L O V E S T R E E T " S I N G L E
"Hello I Love You"/ "Love Street" is released. The single is seen by many as a sell out by The Doors to achieve Billboard rankings. The band knew it was commercial enough to top the charts and this is what the record company wanted pressuring the band into recording these types of songs to get back on the radio because there last two singles were banned. Around this time, Jose Feliciano releases his version of "Light my Fire" and it soon tops the charts placing The Doors into the mainstream of american music ever the more. The Doors are now as pop as it gets alienating some of there earlier underground fans.
Fri. June 7th: The
Fresno Fairgrounds - Fresno, CA
Sat. June 8th: Bakersfield
Civic Center - Bakersfield, CA (Feast
Of Friends)
Sat. June 15th: The
Memorial Auditorium (promo) - Sacramento, CA
Fri. June 28th: La
Playa Stadium - Santa Barbara, CA
Sat. June 29th: Community
Concourse Convention Hall - San Diego, CA
Sun. June 30th: McArthur
Court - Univ. of Oregon - Eugene, OR (DU)
The Doors are now one of the biggest bands in America and begin playing and selling out arenas making over $35,000.00 a night.
H O L L Y W O O D B O W L
Fri. July 5th: Hollywood
Bowl (pics and promos) - Los Angeles, CA (Feast
Of Friends)
The show is touted as
the event of the season and everyone who is anyone comes out to see the
show. Mick Jagger and Jimmy Miller have dinner with the band at Mu
Ling's Chinese restaurant before the show and are in the audience this
night to see the big show. All 18,000 seats are sold out and the
stage is tweaked with over 60,000 watts of power. The Doors hire
a few additional cameramen to their crew who are filming tonight, one of
which turns out to be a young Harrison Ford.
Steppenwolf opens the
evening followed by The Chambers Brothers and they blow the crowd away.
The Doors follow and there is anticlimax in the air. Jim drops acid
before the show and the band begins with a very long intro to "When The
Music's Over" and what is suppose to be suspense turns into monotiny.
Throughout the night, the crowd awaits Jim to do something but on this
night he just stands by the mic and sings his heart out concentrating on
his vocal performance. Jim is performing professionally this night
and the crowd, with plenty of left over fireworks from the 4th, wants the
crazy freak to do something they can tell their freinds. Mick Jagger
is interveiwed after the show calling it a bore saying 'They (The Doors)
were nice chaps, but they played a bit too long.'
Sat. July 6th: Kaleidoscope
- Hollywood, CA
Sun July 7th: Ed
Sullivan Show Re-broadcast
The Doors performance
taped on Sept. 17th, 1967 is re-broadcast.
Tue. July 9th: Dallas
Memorial Auditorium - Dallas, TX (Feast
Of Friends)
Wed. July 10th: Sam
Houston Coliseum (pics and promo) - Houston, TX (Feast
Of Friends)
Fri. July 12th: Seattle
Center Arena - Seattle, WA
T H I R D A L B U M W A I T I N G F O R T H E S U N I S R E L E A S E D
Fri. July 12th (2): Waiting
For The Sun (pics and songs)
The Doors third album
is released and is a huge success among the kids and Top 40 radio.
The rave reveiws from there previous two albums comes back to haunt them
by comparison and the album receives much negative press do to its overall
pop appeal. The press begins to turn on The Doors. As if in
apology for not making the record, inside the sleeve of the album is Morrison's
133-line poem
"The Celebration of the Lizard".
Sat. July 13th: P.N.E
Coliseum - Vancouver, Canada
Sat. July 20th: The
Honolulu International Civic Arena - Honolulu, HI (Feast
Of Friends)
Thu. Aug. 1st: J.F.K.
Stadium - Bridgeport, CT
Fri. Aug. 2nd: The
Singer Bowl (pics and promo) - Flushing Meadows Park, NY (Feast
Of Friends)
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.
Sat. Aug. 3rd: Public
Hall (Musicarnival) (pics) -
Cleveland, OH
(Feast Of Friends)
Last time they were here only
700 people showed up to see them perform, but this time The Doors pack
the place with 9,200 screaming teenage kids. Jim is again in rare
form tonight showing up well inebriated and mischevious. During "Light
My Fire" he jumps completely off the stage well into the audience.
The fans go crazy throwing chairs and punches as shirts are torn and mass
hysteria breaks all around Jim. Order is somewhat restored and Jim
ends the show by flinging himself to the stage lying motionless.
A kid gets on stage and takes a photo of him bringing Jim back to life
and he flings upward as being reborn. Later, as the crowd leaves,
he appears back up onstage causing pandemonium as many were trying to then
get back in to see what is going on.
Sun. Aug. 4th: The
Philadelphia Arena (promo) -
Philadelphia,
PA
Fri. Aug. 30th: Merriweather
Post Pavillion (pics) - Columbia, MD (Feast
Of Friends)
Sat. Aug. 31st: The
Convention Hall (pics and ticket) - Ashbury Park, NJ (Feast
Of Friends)
Sun. Sept. 1st: Saratoga
Performing Arts Center (backstage
pics) -
Saratoga Springs, NY (Feast
of Friends concludes)
Jim and his Feast of Friends film crew get
on a plane today to New York prior to the show. This is The Doors
final appearance before their big upcoming European Tour and, for more
important documentative aspects, the last performance taped for Feast
Of Friends. Tonight Jim swaggers out slow and serene and what
appears to be an upcoming mellow Morrison evening until the band abruptly
jumps into 'Back Door Man' to start an upbeat, fierce, and intense evening
of driving music an electrifying vocals. Morrison comes out for a
standing ovation after the show, bows, and then abruptly leaps into the
audience where police and security move in freeing him and directing him
back onto the stage. The crowd is livid and pleads for more - but
The Doors must be on their way for tomorrow they fly off to London.
On the way to New York however, The Doors stop at The Aerodome in
Schenectady, NY where Jim sits in with an undetermined blues band for more
than a few numbers and drinks!
E U R O P E A N T O U R
Mon. Sept. 2nd:
The Doors embark on a 17-day tour of Europe flying out of Kennedy International
Airport in Queens, NY to London on Air India on a 11:00 p.m. flight, which
was delayed from a 6:00 p.m. flight schedule. Note:
The Jefferson Airplane and Canned Heat are currently touring Europe and
The Doors will catch up with them, schedules permitting, and share billing
on upcoming concert dates.
Tue. Sept. 3rd: London
Airport (arrival pics) - England
The Doors and their equipment
crew arrive at London's Heathrow Airport where the Granada Television crew
is awaiting their arrival.
Thu. Sept. 5th: Top
of The Pops - BBC-1 TV, London, England
The Doors play "Hello I Love
You" live during the show. Jim is less than thrilled. Also
appearing: Canned Heat.
Fri. Sept. 6th - Sat. 7th: The
Roundhouse (pics and promos) -
London, England
The Doors do two shows a night
selling out all 10,000 seats of the remodeled train station's 2,500 seat
concert hall. Both concerts on Friday are filmed by Granada Television
for the British television program "The Doors Are Open." (Note:
The program airs on October 4th and only footage of the 2nd show is used)
The concerts go extremely well. Jim is somewhat reserved in his performances
but very involved and in good voice, control, and appearance. On
the first night: The Doors open for The Jefferson
Airplane. These Friday shows are attended by many London music scene
artists, such as members of the Rolling Stones and Traffic.
Jim is fabulous and sober!
On
the 2nd night: The Jefferson Airplane opens
up for The Doors. Jim would later state that this 2nd show on Saturday
night was probably one of the band's all-time best performances.
"The audience was one of the best we've ever had. Everyone seemed
to take it so easy. It's probably the most informed, receptive audience
I've ever seen in my life."
Sat. Sept. 7th: ICA
Gallery (pics) - The Mall,
London, England
The Doors hold a press conference
which is filmed by Granada Television and becomes part of "The Doors Are
Open" broadcast/film/video.
Fri. Sept. 13th: "4-3-2-1
Hot & Sweet" TV Show (pics) - Romer Square - Frankfurt, West
Germany
The Doors do a 1:00 p.m. lip-synch,
in an outdoor presentation, of "Hello I Love You" and "Light My Fire"
in the streets of Frankfurt. Later this afternoon, they do a press
conference at Frankfurt city hall.
Sat. Sept. 14th: Kongresshalle
- Frankfurt, West Germany (pics and promo)
Also
performing: Canned
Heat
Sun. Sept. 15th: Concertgebouw
- Amsterdam, Holland, Netherlands
Jim runs into a few problems.
Before the show, members of The Jefferson Airplane and The Doors are walking
around town and, since drugs are legal in Amsterdam, the fans in the streets
are giving the members all sorts of drugs to either try some or to take
with them for later. Well, Jim takes everything
that is given
to him and later ends up on stage during the Airplane's opening set dancing
around and soon passes out cold. Jim is taken to the hospital and
upset with Jim the other three members perform and go on without him doing
an outstanding show with Ray handling the singing sounding incredibly like
him. Jim recovers the next morning and reads rave reveiws of the
band going on without him. He jokes about the show but something
else is going on. Jim realizes that he is not The Doors.
Tue. Sept. 17th: FalkonerConcerthall(pic)
- Copenhagen, Denmark
Jim is overly aggressive
and the audience is withdrawn and dissappointed.
Wed. Sept. 18th: Television-Byen
- Gladsaxe, Copenhagen, Denmark
The Doors appear at 10:00
a.m. to do a live performance of six songs to nothing but a camera crew.
The band is obviously tired and there is no audience to feed off.
The recordings of "Love Me Two Times" and "Texas Radio and The Big Beat"
are included in the album Alive She Cried and the video "Dance on
Fire".
Fri. Sept. 20th: Konserthuset
- Stockholm, Sweden
The Doors play an early
and late show this evening. This is The Doors final shows of their
European Tour. Both performances are supberb and indicitive of the
band on a good night, especially the late show. Also performing:
The Jefferson Airplane
Sat. Sept. 21st: Return
to Los Angeles?
After the shows, The Doors
and their accompanying road crew return to London and then fly on to Los
Angeles, with the exception of Jim and Pam, who remain in London at the
Belgravia Hotel through October 20th. Ray and Dorothy spend two days
in London before heading back to the states and hang out with Jim and Pam
in their nicely furnished flat they had secured for a month.
J I M M E E T S T H E B E A T L E S
Mon. Sept. 23rd: Abbey
Road Studios - London, England
In the evening, Jim
visits The Beatles during one of their recording sessions. The Beatles
are working on "Happiness is a Warm Gun" by Lennon and Jim possibly sings
chorus on one take, but more than likely, he only watches and listens for
awhile, says hello, and leaves shortly afterwards.
T H E D O O R S B E G I N R E H E A R S A L S F O R T H E S O F T P A R A D E
The Doors take it easy from
touring and begin rehearsals for their fourth album, The Soft Parade.
Jim
manages to get away often and is more and more participating in the editing
of the documentary, now titled
"Feast of Friends"
(pics),
in The Doors office with Frank Lisciandro,
Paul Ferrara and Babe Hill, who are now calling themselves, rather arrogantly,
the "Media Manipulators."
Jim views footage of the band
onstage in shows like The Singer Bowl and sees himself in a different light
- much like a puppet being controlled by alot of forces he only vaguely
understands. Beginning around this time, Jim often refuses to give
interveiws choosing rather to write a poem or rap for publication thus
revealing perhaps more about Jim Morrison than they might have otherwise
expected and/or received.
Sun Oct. 13th: Michael
McClure Visits Jim - Belgravia Hotel - London, England
While still in London, Jim
meets up with San Francisco beat poet Michael McClure and they establish
a personal friendship based out of respect of each other's work.
During this time while waiting for Jim to get out of bed one morning, McClure
finds some of Jim's poetry laying around the loft and secretly reads it.
He is very impressed and suggests that Jim try and get some of it published
to a private edition for friends to read. It is to become the beginning
of The Lords, and The New Creatures.
Sun. Oct. 20th: Back
in the States - Jim
and Pam return from London and Jim immediately heads to rehearsals for
their fourth upcoming album The Soft Parade. The Doors are
in and out of rehearsals for the upcoming studio album from this point
until the midwest tour begins.
F A L L M I D W E S T T O U R - ( 8 C O N C E R T S )
Thur. Oct. 31st: Freedom
Hall - Louisville, KY - Halloween 1968
The
Doors play one 8:00 p.m. show and everything goes rather well. Morrison
comes out in somewhat of a different style wearing baggy white jeans
and a t-shirt while smoking a cigarette. Is this his costume for
the evening? None the less, he's his usual subdued self (when he's
subdued) and there's only a minor obscenity here and there between the
band's tight and explosive improvises.
Fri. Nov. 1st: Milwaukee
Arena (promo) - Milwaukee, WI
Tonight Jim takes a plunge
of the stage at the conclusion of "The End". The band then encores
with a crowd rousing "Gloria" where Jim lets loose and brings a good night
to a fitting close. Review:
"The
Doors, to the uninitiated, are no wooden set of guitar pickers and brassy
vocalists. They are possibly the leading exponents of acid rock -
acid in terms of drug oriented, perhaps; acid in terms of social commentary,
certainly. They plug into Morrison as 1,300 watts of amplified sound
blast into their minds, a sound so loud it drives thought out, a sound
so loud it pins the value judgements of the adult world to the far wall
of the arena and leaves them squirming helplessly. From 'Light My
Fire' to 'The End'...the sinister lyrics socked their satanically sensual
message to the crowd." (Pierre-Rene Noth,
"Acid rock singers etch their message," Milwaukee Journal, Nov.
2, 1968)
Sat. Nov. 2nd: Veterans
Memorial Hall - Columbus, OH (7:30 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.)
Sun. Nov. 3rd: Chicago
Coliseum - Chicago, IL
The Doors play one afternoon
show at 3:30 p.m. The show is just the opposite of their rowdy appearance
here on May 10th and from the outset Jim and the band are subdued to the
point of hypnosis. Jim is obviously slowed by alcohol and off key
yet remakably graphic and poignant during "The Celebration of the Lizard"
which the band plays before closing with an airy version of "Light My Fire".
Thu. Nov. 7th: Arizona
State Fair, Veterans Memorial Coliseum - Phoenix, AZ
Jim tells the
other members in the band 'I want to see phoenix flip-out' and right from
the start he gets the crowd of 10,000 strong going by provoking nearly
500 teenagers into rushing the stage creating a war between concert goers
and security. Jim comes very close to getting arrested himself for
using obscenities and lewd behavior. Charges are filed but later
retracted as the city of Pheonix decides to rather ban The Doors from playing
here ever again.
Fri. Nov. 8th: Dane
County Memorial Coliseum - Madison, WI
Sat. Nov. 9th: Kiel
Auditorium - St. Louis, MO
Sun. Nov. 10th:Minneapolis
Concert Hall (pics) - Minneapolis, MN (8th
and final Midwest Tour date)
It's
obvious from the pictures of this concert that Jim is very tired.
The Doors always kept their tours extremely short and spread out because
Jim would often take his excesses a little too far and many times right
on through to the next day! It definitely made for some great performances
but also some rather poor hung-over and worn performances. All in
all, the tours were kept short because he would eventually and obviously
get tired - check out the pics!
Late November:
The Doors back from doing 7 shows, in 7 cities, in only 10 days go right
into Elektra's brand new recording studio to begin recording
The Soft
Parade. The Doors are the first band to record in this
new state-of-the-art Elektra studio that they helped build. The band
members thought it was going to be free recording sessions but Jac Holzman,
president of Elektra, only gives them a 10% discount! During these
sessions, Beatle George Harrison stops by and compares how the band is
tying in an orchestra this album to The Beatles recording of Sergeant
Pepper.
Wed. Dec. 4th: Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour (pics) - CBS Television City, Los Angeles,
CA
The Doors record their only
appearance on the show as everyone synchs to the music as Jim sings live.
They perform "Touch Me" and "Wild Child" with the house orchestra.
Robby is sporting a black eye during the performance caused by a few rednecks
that had given him and Jim a hard time a few days earlier. The delay
beetween recordings and airplay is typically 10 days.
J I M T U R N S 2 5
Sun. Dec. 8th: Jim
Turns 25
Sat. Dec. 14th: L.A.
Forum (pics and promos) - Inglewood, CA (Jim's
brother Andy is in attendence)
Providing a fitting end to
their tremendously successful year on the outside and terrible year on
the inside, The Doors fill the stage with 32 amplifiers, a string sextet,
and a full brass section playing mostly new songs from
The Soft Parade
to a stunned audience of over 18,000 who only want to hear "Light My Fire".
The audience has been booing every opening act horribly off the stage awaiting
The Doors to sing their most popular songs. During their show, the
band reluctantly gives in and plays "Light My Fire" but afterwards the
audience begins chanting 'again, again'. They want The Doors to play
the damn song again! Jim has all he can take and chastises the crowd.
Only a year ago he was playing to at most 3,500 fans and had the control.
Now, the crowds were beginning to call the shots and he is sick of it all.
In defiance, in L.A., he walks to the front of the stage sits down and
recites the entire 133 line Celebration of the Lizardin front of 18,000
- mostly teenagers! When it ends he glares at the audience, no words
need spoken, and walks off the stage to almost no ovation. The backstage
atmosphere is that of a funeral and later Jim plays kick the can with his
brother Andy and Pam in the parking lot on the way home. Jim is becoming
increasingly bummed out by audiences expectations of him. It will
all culminate in a few months . . . . in Miami. Also performing but
getting terribly booed off the stage: Jerry Lee Lewis, Sweetwater, Tzon
Yen Luie (Japanese Koto player)
"I don't know what will happen. I guess we'll continue like this
for a while. Then to get our vitality back, maybe we'll have to get
out of the whole business. Maybe we'll all go to an island by ourselves
and start creating again." Jim interviewed the afternoon of the Forum
show
A monster arrived
In the mirror
To mock the room
& its fool alone
Sun. Dec. 15th: Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour
The Doors appear nationwide
to 27.1 million people as their recorded performance on the 4th airs tonight
on CBS. The Doors are at their most prolific popularity and injectuous
mainstream stardom.
JIM ENDS THE YEAR WITHOUT CUTTING HIS HAIR FOR OVER 7 MONTHS (since mid May)
T h e D o o r s I n t e r a c t i v e C h r o n o l o g i c a l H i s t o r y
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