The Doors Greatest Hits

Written by Eric Olsen
Published September 08, 2002
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There is no morning after if the night never ends, so get up and get right back into it. Once Big Jim has that first one, it's all over, the rest of the day is spoken for. It's all so easy when the day slips by in a haze. As another genius/substance abuser, Lowell George, confided, "It's so easy to slip, It's so easy to fall, And let your memory slip into nothing at all."

"I pay people to take care of me. I've earned it. I'm a great man. I don't have to face up to the fact that I can't face up to the facts. I can provide a perfectly plausible explanation for my behavior that makes it all sound noble. Chasing my muse and all - I love it. People like little Danny Sugerman suck this stuff up. They don't realize that I'm just another drunk," muses Morrison in his bathtub, cocktail in one hand, joint in the other.

But Morrison was rarely this circumspect. He mostly bought his own bunk, though it took ever-increasing quantities of chemicals to keep the belief up. He who seeks to deceive, deceives himself most of all. That is why "Roadhouse Blues" is such a classic: the self deception is so cheerful and clever and bold. Morrison reveled in exposing his clever self-deception to the world. He was an exhibitionist, after all.

Logically, it doesn't necessarily follow that an approaching apocalypse justifies wanton hedonism. The existentialists believed quite the opposite. They felt that the absurdity of life and the nonexistence of God gave man the freedom and the moral imperative to establish his own humanistic values and to follow them scrupulously. This is the existentialist meaning of life.

Jim Morrison was not an existentialist. "Roadhouse Blues" implies "Life is absurd. There is no God. The end is always just around the corner. Therefore, have a beer - in fact, have several. My advice to you is to start drinking heavily."

The song concludes with a final,

"Roll, baby, roll
Roll, baby, roll
Roll, baby, roll
All night long."

This is what is important: continuation of the Party, all night long and the night never ends. As long as the night doesn't end we don't have to face up to any of this, and that is about as serious as it gets.

"Wine knows how to decorate the Evil Houses
With a luxury miraculous,
And to make surge from a sunset fabulous
The red gold, where the hot sun drowses
Before he falls into the ocean perilous." (Baudelaire, The Poison)

While "Roadhouse Blues is a love song to alcohol and the Party, "Riders on the Storm" is a love song to the dark side itself, as personified by Baudelaire's "ocean perilous." The sea is mother and the sea is death. The sea is a metaphor for the collective subconscious. The sea is the intimate womb and the vast unknown.

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Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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The Doors Greatest Hits
Published: September 08, 2002
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Classic Rock and Oldies, Music: Rock
Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments

#1 — March 11, 2004 @ 16:19PM — Denyse Gattorna [URL]

I'd like to hear an analysis of "The End", specifically regarding the intense imagery and graphic symbolism he used (i.e.: Roman wilderness of pain, weird scenes inside the gold mine, riding the blue bus, the 7 mile long snake, the ancient lake and the reference to the Oedipus complex).

#2 — March 11, 2004 @ 18:12PM — Shark

yea, c'mon.

huah.

Great music and nice analysis, Eric.

It sounds ridiculous, but Morrison was probably the biggest influence in my young life. Sent me off on a trail of exploration that wound through Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Maldoror, Breton, Tzara, Dali, Duchamp, the Beats, writing, filmmaking, art, performance, theatre, music, oh--- and sex drugs and rock and roll.

I probably owe the first step on that long literary and art-strewn path to a song I heard in the summer of 67: Break on Through. Heady times.

I'm lucky I survived, too.


Oh, and I saw the Doors live three times. Pre fame, height of fame, and post-fame. Whew.

#3 — March 11, 2004 @ 18:23PM — JR

The Doors didn't have anywhere near the impact on me that The Monkees did. It was their TV show that got me into music, sending me off on a trail of... uh, listening to more music.

#4 — March 11, 2004 @ 21:15PM — Shark

JR, I knew I'd be mocked for that. As I typed it, a voice in my head said, "Please don't tell, please, please."

Like a fool, I ignored it. Wonder if I can get BB to petition management to delete that comment?

re: Monkees trail - I heard it leads directly to Menudo. And don't step in the Medoodoo.

#5 — March 12, 2004 @ 05:11AM — Josh

An analysis of "The End" would indeed be interesting. I happen to know that Greek legend is used throughout the song, first describing the ancient gallery of masks ("He took a face from the ancient gallery...") and then in the legendary Oedipus section. As far as the 'Roman wilderness of pain' and things like that are concerned, I'm almost positive that it had something to do with literature and/or philosophy, since Jim was such a devoted intellectual and an absolute EXPERT on these things.

Anyway, The Doors are the best and Morrison is the man. Nobody had more charisma, charm or uniqueness. Nobody.

#6 — March 12, 2004 @ 10:30AM — JR

Actually Shark, I didn't mean to mock you. I was more making a reference to a little controversy somewhere else around here. You'll never guess who started it.

And seeing The Doors live is very impressive. On another post around here was a thread on first concerts. You'd rank pretty high, but the woman who saw the Stones in '65 probably has you beat.

#7 — March 12, 2004 @ 11:09AM — Eric Olsen

Denyse, I don't talk a whole lot about "The End" specifically, but I do talk a lot about thefirst album in general here.

Thanks Shark, and I'd love to see a discussion those shows - I never saw them live, was a little too young. I can't imagine what you would be ashemed on in that comment.

And Josh, I agree, as we have seen here where JR links and elsewhere, Morrison and the Doors are still underrated.

#8 — March 12, 2004 @ 20:29PM — Shark

JR, re. Mocking - hey, I deserved it! Feel free to mock anytime ya want.

Thanks for the link to "The Great Monkees Controversy" -- Big Al sure knows how to hurt,don't he!?

I don't think music history will have much to say about the Monkees, but their film, "HEAD" is a treasured part of my DVD library.

re: Stones 65 -

I can't top that, but my wife can: Beatles in 1964.

She couldn't hear them, but she did get a good look.

*Better yet, she kept her Beatle dolls in the unopened boxes. (our retirement, post-Enron)


#9 — June 14, 2006 @ 17:57PM — Steph

Best article/review I've read on that complex, beautiful, crazy, disturbed man. I will be looking into more of your writing!

#10 — June 14, 2006 @ 18:22PM — Eric Berlin [URL]

Great stuff, EO, glad I came across this classic from BC's past.

Growing up I was immensely attracted to dark, romantic, self-destructive creative forces such as Morrison and Jack Kerouac and Kurt Cobain.

Weird anecdote: For the entire three hours that I spent taking the SATs in the 11th grade, the "Woke up this morning / got myself a beer" verse blared and taunted in my head. Perhaps it was my own self-conscious trying to drive me into some kind of unknown and vaguely perceived future.

I love your description of existentialism and where Morrison himself sat in terms of morality. I think many of The Doors' best known songs play with this theme of boundaries, of escaping morality and hurling through the darkness to explode in a cacophony of life force, destructive force: Break On Through, End of the Night, Light My Fire, The End, and Roadhouse and Riders as you've illustrated here.

As I've gotten older I've become more attracted to lesser known Doors' tracks, where a more wistful (wiser?) Morrison at times emerges. Soul Kitchen is certainly a powerhouse, perhaps because the poetry is set to imagery set in the real.

Lighting another cigarette in the soul's kitchen, learning to forget, yearning to forget, is for me a much more powerful image than some kind of fool's journey to the fatalistic beyond, you know?

#11 — December 11, 2006 @ 10:32AM — Angela

Jim Morrison is a rock ledgend that will live with people today and many more to come. he has inspired me and made me think about alot. thank you Jim Morrison!

#12 — March 7, 2007 @ 14:26PM — rider

I can't believe that I read this.
As I was reading, I kept saying "yes, that's right".
Until now I thought that I am the only one that is depressed, disturbed, violent, and intelligent enough to understand the lyrics of "Riders on the storm".
So it seems I was wrong.
And the analysis of "Roadhouse blues" - wow!
Thanks, Eric

#13 — March 25, 2007 @ 23:39PM — steven ufkes

Very impressive, this gave me a lot of understanding about some of the strange things that Jim Morrison wrote.

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