Disco de The Doors: “L.A. Woman [Remaster]”
![Disco de The Doors: “L.A. Woman [Remaster]” Disco de The Doors: “L.A. Woman [Remaster]”](http://www.poprockbands.com/covers_prD/the-doors/2007_170_170_L.A.%2520Woman%2520%255BRemaster%255D.jpg) Descripción (en inglés) :
The Doors: Jim Morrison (vocals); Robbie Krieger (guitar); Ray Manzarek (piano, organ); John Densmore (drums).
<p>Additional personnel: Marc Benno (guitar); Jerry Scheff (bass).
<p>Recorded at The Doors Workshop, Los Angeles, California.
<p>Each CD cover has been crafted by hand to recreate the original see-through cover art.
<p>The Doors: Jim Morrison (vocals); Robbie Krieger (guitar); Ray Manzarek (bass instrument); John Densmore (drums).
<p>Additional personnel: Marc Benno (guitar); Jerry Scheff (bass instrument).
<p>Recording information: The Doors Workshop, Los Angeles, California (1971).
<p>The final Doors album to feature vocalist Jim Morrison reaffirmed the quartet's grasp of blues-rock. Beset by personal and professional problems, they retreated to a rehearsal room, cast pressures aside, and recorded a handful of their most memorable compositions. The overall sound of the record is relatively stripped down, but the musicianship is uniformly excellent, with empathetic interplay between guitarist Robbie Krieger and keyboard player Ray Manzarek. Jim Morrison's voice, though somewhat ragged and weather-worn, adds its fiercely unmistakable resonance.
<p>The spooky, low-key "Cars Hiss By My Window" and an edgy cover of John Lee Hooker's "Crawling King Snake" are straight, no-nonsense blues, but the album's highlights, including the jangling radio hit "Love Her Madly" and the breezy, chugging title track, which rides on a thrumming bass line and Krieger's fluid licks, mix bluesy bluster with the Doors' swirling, poetic magic. Morrison's death within weeks of the album's completion cast a pall over its content, especially the eerie rain and the funereal electric piano of "Riders On The Storm," the album's indisputable standout, and one of the most compelling, evocative songs in the band's catalogue. Though not the Doors' finest record, L.A. WOMAN was a fitting swan song for one of the most unique and important bands of the '60s.
<p>The final Doors album to feature vocalist Jim Morrison reaffirmed the quartet's grasp of blues/rock. Beset by personal and professional problems, they retreated to a rehearsal room, cast such pressures aside and recorded several of their most memorable compositions. The musicianship is uniformly excellent, the interplay between guitarist Robbie Krieger and keyboard player Ray Manzarek exudes confidence and empathy, while the strength and nuances of Morrison's voice add an unmistakable resonance. His death within weeks of the album's completion inevitably casts a pall over its content, especially the eerie rain and the funereal electric piano of 'Riders On The Storm'.
<p>The final Doors album to feature vocalist Jim Morrison reaffirmed the quartet's grasp of earthy blues-rock. Beset by personal and professional problems, they retreated to a rehearsal room, cast such pressures aside, and recorded several of their most memorable compositions. The musicianship is uniformly excellent, the interplay between guitarist Robbie Krieger and keyboardist Ray Manzarek exudes confidence and empathy, while the strength and nuances of Morrison's voice add an unmistakable resonance. The singer's death within weeks of the album's completion inevitably casts a pall over its content, especially the eerie, doom-laden "Riders On The Storm."
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Información del disco :
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L.A. Woman [Remaster] |
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UPC:081227999865
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Formato:CD
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Tipo:Performer
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Género:Rock & Pop - Psychedelic
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Artista:The Doors
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Productor:Bruce Botnick; The Doors
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Sello:Rhino Records (USA)
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Distribuidora:WEA (distr)
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Fecha de publicación:2007/03/27
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Año de publicación original:1971
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Número de discos:1
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Grabación:Analog
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Mezcla:Analog
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Masterización:Digital
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Mono / Estéreo:Stereo
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Estudio / Directo:Studio
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63 personas de un total de 73 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The Doors finest album
The Doors final album with Jim Morrison (they would go on to record two more albums as a trio), remains their masterpiece and belongs in every rock collection. From start to finish, the album is brilliant. It was the Doors at their absolute best. The Doors previous albums ranged from very good to classic, but their sixth album "L.A. Woman" was their crown jewel.
It's common for most bands to start out playing the blues and then evolve into a musical style/idenity all their own. In this sense, the Doors sort of evolved backwards. They started out playing crazy, psychedelic music, and then ended their career playing the blues.
"L.A. Woman" is a very bluesy album. It's not pure blues (B.B. King, Leadbelly), but it's rock tinged with blues. The band never sounded better. To be sure, the Doors albums were always terrific, but they sounded most at home with the blues. Playing blues rock brought out the best in all the Doors members. Ray Manzarek (organ) and Robby Krieger's (guitar) solos worked perfectly against a blues backdrop. Drummer John Densmore's jazzy style was also well suited for the blues.
As for Jim Morrison...I think the Jim Morrison of 1967 was best suited to sing psychedelic acid rock. His ultra-cool swagger and showmanship was the ultimate voice for such music. But the Jim Morrison of 1971 was a much different person. In four years, Morrison aged a lifetime. In 1967, he sounded and looked 23. In 1971, he looked and sounded like an old man. It's hard to believe that the same voice that sang "Light My Fire" sang "Riders on the Storm" only four years later. On "L.A. Woman," Morrison sounds worn and tired, but it matched the bluesy-jazzy downbeat music perfectly. Morrison's finest poetry was also in this swan song. Noting too obscure or bizarre to be found. It was his most honest, straightforward work.
"L.A. Woman" is simply The Doors finest collection of songs. There is no filler to be found. Each song is a jewel on The Doors crown creation. From the opening "The Changeling," to the closing "Riders on the Storm," every song is great. Whether is be the hard rocking "Love Her Madly," the downbeat "Cars His By My Window," the bohemian "The Wasp" or the sublime "Riders on the Storm," every song is a masterpiece.
The general theme of the album seems to be the underbelly of L.A. in the early 70s. The album seems to function as a snapshot/soundtrack of that time and place. It's all about living day-to-day, strung-out, alone, not knowing when it will all end. In that sense, I take "LA Woman" to be sort of like a diary in the lives of Jim and (his wife) Pam. When you listen to this album, you can feel the longing, the desperation, the torment, the addictions, of that time and place. These songs sound lived in. When you listen to Morrison's screams in the title track, or soft-spoken baritone in "Cars Hiss By My Window" you get the sense that he knew it was going to end soon. "Riders on the Strom" seems to acknowledge and accept this fate.
The Doors "L.A. Woman" is one of the greatest albums of all-time and it is an album that every rock fan should own.
9 personas de un total de 9 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Almost perfect (so close)
This is so close to a perfect DVD-Audio disc from Warner Music that it is disappointing it isn't. The tracks have been meticulous remastered and the sound is sharp and "new". "Riders on the Storm" has the storm in all the channels and is extremely effective. I played it in a local home theater store that had overhead rear speakers and that was very interesting.
The one track that still needs work is "Love Her Madly". The drum solos fly around all the channels per beat. An interesting effect but somewhat annoying after a while. But, the real disappointing part is the LFE (the .1 low bass channel). The LFE level on "Love Her Madly" is almost non-existent on the DVD-Audio version but powerful on the Dobly Digital version. Unfortunately, this means the Dolby Digital version sounds better than the DVD-Audio version of "Love Her Madly". I find it hard to believe that this was intended.
So, with the exception of the one track, the disc is excellent. Too bad Warner Music can't fix that problem and make this a fully enjoyable disc.
7 personas de un total de 7 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- Its a good day for old music
Being a doors fan is one thing but after hearing them all over the room in diffrent places, I love d.v.d audio, This is the best d.v.d audio I have herd so far it has better sound then any c.d. you will ever here!!
6 personas de un total de 6 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The Doors at their finest
When I first heard this album, I was absolutely blown away. My previous exposure to The Doors had been limited to a double-CD set with all the hits. I'd heard "LA Woman", but not "The Changeling"! What a revelation! This album is especially poignant to me, because it is the final Doors album and the last piece of work produced by that madman Jim Morrison. Listen to him on "Hyacinth House" singing "I need a brand new friend who doesn't bother me, I need a brand new friend who doesn't trouble me, I need someone, yeah, who doesn't need me".
What was he talking about? A new girl to replace Pamela? A new drug to replace alcohol? A new muse to replace those he had lost on his haphazard journey through rock stardom? It seems to me that Morrison was tired of the whole "rock star" schtick and wanted to finally be the artist he had always dreamed he would be : an old bluesman that we could all understand. He, along with the other band members, found that bluesman for this album and forced him to write some great songs.
The album opens with "The Changeling", and it grabs you by the throat as Jim's howls compete with Ray's dominant keyboards. Robbie's "Don't You Love Her Madly" pulls us back from the brink with a nice little ditty which Morrison makes his own with his deep, bottom-of-the-well bellows.
Next up is a song that's blues on steroids, "Been Down So Long". The addition of an in-studio bass player really gives some balls to this song. "Cars Hiss By My Window" is so mellow it almost puts you to sleep, but it's so spooky, almost as if Morrison's in the room with you, at a cheap motel on a beach, in the early morning darkness. "Side One", as we used to call it, ends with "LA Woman" and it's everything the supposed opuses on previous albums, "The End" and "When The Music's Over", were supposed to be. "LA Woman" succeeds because it's a better song straight up than the other two, but also because the lyrics tell a coherent and believable story. We get to ride with Morrison for a night and what a wild ride it is!
Side two opens with an entirely different feel, "L'America's" military drumbeats marching us along to Jim's vocal cadence. Is he the rainmaker, the widowmaker, or just someone who wants to steal your wife? Who knows?!
"Hyacinth House" is, in my view, the saddest song Morrison ever wrote (just ahead of "Crystal Ship"), with Jim's mournful tone and Robbie's tasteful guitar fills dancing together. "Crawling King Snake" is probably what had been in Jim's head since he was a kid listen' to black radio. It's nice to see him take another legend's material (John Lee Hooker) and make it his own.
"The Wasp" continues the hard-driving blues train and is Jim's own contribution to the genre. His poetic lyrics drive this one straight into your mind's eye. He could be a good poet, when he took the time to polish his raw product, which he seems to have done with the lyrics for this song. The album ends softly with "Riders On The Storm", a eulogy for Morrison if there ever was one. Last words, last words... out!
Nobody knows what Morrison and the Doors would have done if he had not died in Paris in '71. We can only speculate. I am just thankful that he lived as long as he did and contributed so much to my life and the lives of countless others through his musical talents. This album is a big part of that gift, so if you do not have it, buy it today. You will not regret it.
5 personas de un total de 5 encontraron útil la siguiente opinión:
- The Best Of The Doors' Remixes
Listening to the other Doors remixes, I felt like the surviving band members and engineer/producer Bruce Botnick were trying to retrofit the older, more psychedelic albums to sound like the blues-rock punch of "L.A. Woman." It didn't work so well for something like "Waiting For The Sun," but it does provide a welcome sonic update for "L.A. Woman" itself.
The original album sounded just a touch piecemeal as a few of the tracks were from older sessions in the case of "L'America" or in the Doors' older style as in "Love Her Madly." I always felt that this stood in contrast with the live-in-the-studio tracks recorded for the album itself. The wide-open, percussion heavy mixes here make the whole thing sound more of a complete sonic picture. "The Changeling" and the title track have a little more bite, which I dig. In fact, the only track here I prefer from the original are "Riders On The Storm," which is a little less dreamy and delicate sounding here, and "Love Her Madly." As I said, the new mix fits on the album better, but I'd consider the original a damn fine single mix.
If you want to get a positive taste of the new mixes of the Doors albums, I'd head for this one first as it does offer what may actually be an improvement over the original.
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