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Bezig met laden... Morrison Hotel [1970 album] (1970)door Doors
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. INFORMATION-This album contains the following tracks: 1 Roadhouse Blues (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 4:04 2 Waiting for the Sun (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 4:00 3 You Make Me Real (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 2:53 4 Peace Frog (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 2:50 5 Blue Sunday (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 2:12 6 Ship of Fools (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 3:08 7 Land Ho! (Robby Krieger / Jim Morrison), 4:10 8 The Spy (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 4:17 9 Queen of the Highway (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 2:47 10 Indian Summer (Robby Krieger / Jim Morrison), 2:35 11 Maggie M'Gill (John Densmore / Robby Krieger / Ray Manzarek / Jim Morrison), 4:24
In late 1969, the Doors were reeling. That March, singer Jim Morrison was charged, tried, and convicted of obscenity for allegedly exposing himself at a concert in Miami. It resulted in promoters canceling future gigs. The July release of The Soft Parade provided more angst. Tired of the sound that governed their previous outings, the band incorporated horn and string arrangements with a new melodic accessibility. It signaled an unwelcome change for critics (though it did reach number six and was radically reappraised posthumously). In November they entered the studio with producer Paul Rothchild exhausted, stressed, and angry. Going back to blues and R&B basics seemed like the only direction to pursue. Morrison Hotel is often dubbed the Doors' blues album, due to raucous opener "Roadhouse Blues," one of the band's most enduring tunes. (Interestingly, it was issued as the B-side of first single "You Make Me Real.") Ray Manzarek leaves behind his organ to pound an upright piano, while guitarist Robby Krieger adds a filthy Chicago-styled riff, prodded by a rock shuffle from drummer John Densmore. The Lovin' Spoonful's John Sebastian (using the pseudonym "G. Puglese") provides its iconic harmonica wail. "Waiting for the Sun" is one of four tunes Morrison composed himself, and a psychedelic holdover from the 1968 album bearing the same title. Manzarek plays a spacy harpsichord as Krieger offers trippy slide guitar. "You Make Me Real" underscores the blues-rock motif, with roiling electric piano, stinging guitar vamps, and Densmore's swaggering shuffle. Morrison lords over all with his boozy, baritone roar. The organ returns on the downright funky boogie of "Peace Frog," as Morrison sings of "blood in the streets" addressing the civic unrest then gripping the nation. He counters near the end with a spoken stanza from his optimistic poem Newborn Awakening. "Ship of Fools" contains shifting time signatures that cross jazz, R&B, and pop, while the buoyant "Land Ho," offers an adventure-laden lyric in a sprawling rock & roll sea chanty, where Manzarek wields his organ like a mad calliope. Krieger's deep, bluesy, minor-key intro to "The Spy" is framed by jazzy electric piano and Morrison's sultry delivery, which approximates a lounge singer. "Queen of the Highway" is fueled by Densmore's powerful drumming and Manzarek's creative use of the Rhodes piano. One of the Doors' most progressive cuts, it seamlessly integrates blues, jazz, and spacy psychedelia. "Maggie McGill" closes the circle on the blues tip. Krieger's unruly, double-tracked slide riffs duel with a pulsing, distorted organ; Densmore bridges them under Morrison's slithering growl -- it foreshadows the singing style he displayed so abundantly on L.A. Woman in 1971. Blues and R&B were foundational to the Doors' musical vocabulary. They employed them to some degree on all of their albums, but never as consistently, adeptly, or provocatively as they did on Morrison Hotel, with absolutely stunning results.
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresGeen genres Dewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)782.42166The arts Music Vocal music Secular Forms of vocal music Secular songs General principles and musical forms Song genres Rock songsLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Morrison Hotel es el quinto álbum de estudio de la banda de rock estadounidense The Doors, publicado el 9 de febrero de 1970, bajo el sello Elektra.Fue grabado entre septiembre y diciembre de 1969, que gracias a que su anterior trabajo, The Soft Parade, no fue muy bien recibido por el público, la banda decidió regresar a un estilo marcadamente blues.