Product Details
L.A Woman

L.A Woman
The Doors

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Product Description

Description 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 isrelatively stripped down, but the musicianship is uniformlyexcellent, 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. 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 mostunique and important bands of the '60s.

Track Listing

  1. Changeling
  2. Love Her Madly
  3. Been Down So Long
  4. Cars Hiss By My Window
  5. LA Woman
  6. L'America
  7. Hyacinth House
  8. Crawlin' Kingsnake
  9. Wasp
  10. Riders On The Storm

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9882 in Music
  • Released on: 1988-08-26
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The last official Doors studio album, LA Woman was still high on the charts when, like the "actor out on loan" of its closing track, "Riders on the Storm", Jim Morrison died in a Paris bathtub in the summer of 1971. Via such tracks as "The Changeling", "Crawling King Snake", and the frothy, rollicking title track, the collection leaned heavily toward the blues--in particular, Morrison's boastful "Lizard King" brand of it. It also holds another entry in the band's ever-adventurous tone poems in the ever-underrated mythical tale of American music and culture, "WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)". --Billy Altman

From Amazon.com
This is the Doors' blues album, their best since their 1967 self-titled debut and their last before singer Jim Morrison died in 1971. The band sounds very inspired here, particular after lackluster efforts like Waiting for the Sun and The Soft Parade. This inspiration is demonstrated in the awesome boogie of "The Changeling" and "L.A. Woman," the lazy blues of "Cars Hiss by My Window," and the very pretty "Hyacinth House" (featuring the great line "I see the bathroom is clear"). Although Morrison not surprisingly takes himself too seriously at times, as in his spoken-word ranting in "The Wasp (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)," Ray Manzarek's keyboards and Robby Krieger's bottleneck guitar both shine, helping to make L.A. Woman a minor rock & roll classic. --Andy Boynton


Customer Reviews

The Doors last effort (and what a way to go!)5
LA Woman, the last gasp of a group that was running out of ideas, such that their long erstwhile producer Paul Rothschild threw the towel in and refused to prdouce having declared to the group they were merely playing "cocktail lounge music"?

Well on the evidence of the remastered CD that was not at all what the final product turned out like. Morrison may have been on his last legs physically as proven by his subsequent early death and emotionally low given the Miami obscenity trial bearing down on him, but the Lizard King went out with all cylinders firing. The recordings were made in a nearby basement the group having vacated the Elektra studios by mutual consent, but being the professionals they were the recordings retain all that was great about the Doors - well played instrumentation by three great musicians with the right hard or light touch as the recordings required and Morrison contributing some great songs notably the title track and Riders on the Storm, though overall there are no fillers.

The album was certainly more bluesy that any prior offerings (even including John Lee Hooker's "Crawling King Snake") but as a band that had always been open to many varied influences that adaptation did not cause any energy level loss. What hits one most on relistening now several decades later is that while a lot of the songs were longer workouts than the prior rocking "Morrison Hotel" LP they still have a quality that leaves standing the earlier recordings by the group - "LA Woman" versus "The End"? - no contest with the later Doors winning hands down in my book!

primitive DVD-A3
This is one of the first DVD-Audio discs released, and the bugs show.

There is no decent DTS version for normal DVD players, and worst of all, it is very inflexible in DVD-A mode. For example it DEMANDS a subwoofer and a centre speaker, so those with phantom setups will lose quite a bit - most of Jim's vocals come from the centre channel.

Shame, because musically it's a classic.

EDIT:
Compared to the new DVDAs of the Doors, this one is different, a more aggressive mix perhaps.

Another Lost Angel5
As other reviewers have noted this CD is the last and best of the Doors recording together.

Personally, it makes me think of what could have been had Jim Morrison survived. His soulful blues personality was just setting in. He seemed to have gotten over being a ROCK STAR, and was striving for something else, maybe to find himself?

He hadn't seen his parents or his siblings in the years before his death. When he died in Paris, I bet there were a lot of things running through his head on a personal level. As a fan I wish he could have written about it, and as a person I wish he could have figured it out.

This album gives a glimpse into Morrison's tortured soul, and of the unspeakable truths he could not confront about himself. He was signing the blues because he had the blues.