THE DOORS - THE END | REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 7 чер 2024
  • 😳Whoa!! This Was Insanely GOOD!!
    Here’s the video link • The Doors The End
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @rplumlee48
    @rplumlee48 3 роки тому +779

    During my time with the Mobile Riverine Force in Vietnam, we listened to this song and wondered if today would be the end of our lives, or maybe tomorrow. Needless to say, it holds a special place in my memories of the Upper Mekong River.

    • @wescron
      @wescron 3 роки тому +52

      Robert Plumlee thank you for your service. This song is deeper than anyone can imagine. And your era was being spoken to. And every one since, it is time to shift into the next phase. Love and light to you brother!

    • @danthefrst
      @danthefrst 3 роки тому +16

      Even though Im not American, and even though the execution of wat was right got wrong Id have to say: thank you for your service!

    • @2were5678
      @2were5678 3 роки тому +24

      Thanks for your service sorry you had to be there.

    • @ginnyboetel2891
      @ginnyboetel2891 3 роки тому +4

      I hear you bud!

    • @ginnyboetel2891
      @ginnyboetel2891 3 роки тому +5

      It was in a movie, but this reached guys in Vietnam at the time.

  • @nostrilnick
    @nostrilnick 3 роки тому +602

    This song is 50 years old. A half century. Think about that shit when you listen to today's music.

    • @Laudanum-gq3bl
      @Laudanum-gq3bl 3 роки тому +29

      I’ve stopped listening to most new music because so much of it feels programmed, not composed. I listen to a few alt-rock bands but even they’re at least a decade old.

    • @elevenbucks5682
      @elevenbucks5682 3 роки тому +17

      The children really are insane now.

    • @yearginclarke
      @yearginclarke 3 роки тому +5

      VERY good observation! The last time anyone heard anything like this was from listening to this album itself...

    • @szqsk8
      @szqsk8 3 роки тому +11

      nostrilnick I can't think about it because the music of today is all disposable stuff nobody will be talking about in the years to come. Meanwhile here we are listening to music recorded 50 years ago and it is still relevant. 🤘

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud 3 роки тому +16

      @@szqsk8 morrison was dark, but he was also honest, prescient & even forward seeing.... genius gets tossed around a lot, & morrison had his own fair share of personal baggage, but when this cat was dialed in, works like this had staggering power. id like to see jamal do when the musics over, its on this scale.... i notice w/ the doors, even before floyd, they drew the big scape picture to music like no other group. you can tell they had backgrounds in cinema. throw in the symbolist, blake influenced poetry & the bravery to look chaos into its eye & you get works like this that indeed not only stand the test of time, but speak to the chaotic undertones of the West presently moreso then anything you will hear in popular music today. this song was 2 score ahead of the game. morrison sounds almost like an amer prophet here standing on a canyon & watching where the snake was heading presently.

  • @josephvala8302
    @josephvala8302 3 роки тому +303

    "The End" is one of those very few tunes that are far beyond just being a song. It is an experience.

    • @day245
      @day245 2 роки тому +7

      Agree 100%. My favorite song. And this is coming from a Beatles super fan

    • @Beto-pn6rl
      @Beto-pn6rl 2 роки тому +7

      Not a song,
      more like a hipnotic psychological spiritual seonce, yup, that sounds about right...

    • @MrBonners
      @MrBonners 2 роки тому +3

      on the contrary, there was several 'acid rock' bands at the time. the Doors were one of the top 5 definers of it. "trippy" and "far out" as we used to say. Lead to Yes, Moody Blues, ELO, Pink Floyd, Zeppelin , Beatles did a bunch in the genera .

    • @octaviuschacona7404
      @octaviuschacona7404 2 роки тому

      Couldn’t of said it better

    • @janosfernandez945
      @janosfernandez945 Рік тому +2

      Nobody heard this song and came back the same !

  • @bmoredeplorable5152
    @bmoredeplorable5152 3 роки тому +217

    RIP Ray Manzarek, one of the great rock keyboardists playing both keyboard bass with his left hand while playing backround melody with his right in a lenghthy tune dominated by poetry. Long live Ray.....

    • @kayp2617
      @kayp2617 3 роки тому +4

      Truly gifted!

    • @bench7434
      @bench7434 2 роки тому +2

      John paul jones

  • @joekenorer
    @joekenorer 4 роки тому +406

    "The blue bus is calling us" is a reference, The blue bus came to pick up young men drafted for the Vietnam war.

    • @edpearson1787
      @edpearson1787 4 роки тому +55

      I rode in a blue bus from San Antonio to Lackland AFB for Basic Training in 1970, and this was in my head the whole time.

    • @mcfcguvnors
      @mcfcguvnors 4 роки тому +11

      @@edpearson1787 never ever thought id yearn for those bygone days ,but as we stand now ,i wish we could go back 2 b4 mobile phones & the net :/

    • @dougfa3515
      @dougfa3515 3 роки тому +27

      I never knew that... I just thought it was some bizarre thing for Jim to say... thanks for the clarification!

    • @stevedevotion7311
      @stevedevotion7311 3 роки тому +11

      i always just thought it was because they lived in venice beach, since the blue bus is what their public bus is called there. I've ridden it, and it's not as exciting as the song makes it seem

    • @loriholman6125
      @loriholman6125 3 роки тому +2

      @@edpearson1787 😭😭😭

  • @deuddersun
    @deuddersun 4 роки тому +443

    This is what we old white Geezers called "head music". It's best when listened to as loud as possible in a room as dark as possible as stoned as possible. Feed your head, Little Brother.

    • @turfhead5864
      @turfhead5864 4 роки тому +11

      Here Here!!

    • @markbaker3013
      @markbaker3013 3 роки тому +7

      Amen my man, Always faithful.

    • @MrBkunert
      @MrBkunert 3 роки тому +7

      Great times.!

    • @MrPlooky
      @MrPlooky 3 роки тому +12

      agreed, headphones too!

    • @amaliazahav1903
      @amaliazahav1903 3 роки тому +7

      i wish........have my old hash pipe from when i was 17 and nothing to go in

  • @johncox6321
    @johncox6321 3 роки тому +89

    The End was used in the opening sequence of the film Apocalypse Now, where the protagonist was hovering between sleep and waking... and for him, both were nightmarish experiences. My father was a Vietnam Vet, and he couldn't listen to that song without having a fit of PTSD. The song has become a symbol of the experience from that conflict.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 3 роки тому +443

    The Doors sounded ancient and modern and futuristic at the same time.

    • @wayneachen3568
      @wayneachen3568 3 роки тому +8

      They were in some ways ahead of their time.

    • @ravenne27
      @ravenne27 2 роки тому +2

      Yes that’s exactly right!! 💜👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @actionjax7433
      @actionjax7433 2 роки тому +10

      Morrison and Manzarek are geniuses. They’ll be heard in this universe until the end.

    • @dmtaylor6977
      @dmtaylor6977 2 роки тому +6

      Perfect description of the Doors’ music!👍

    • @randypogue5490
      @randypogue5490 2 роки тому +1

      I was a leftcoster in 67, saw them with Jefferson Airplane.

  • @axltyler
    @axltyler 4 роки тому +309

    "There are things known and things unknown and in between are The Doors" - Jim Morrison

    • @nononobutyeah
      @nononobutyeah 4 роки тому +33

      Actually, that's Aldous Huxley.

    • @davidgraham748
      @davidgraham748 4 роки тому +18

      It may have been Huxley but it originally was William Blake. Or at least that’s who got the credit in the book No One Here Gets Out Alive. Which claimed to be an authoritative biography.

    • @chrissherer2047
      @chrissherer2047 4 роки тому +4

      @@davidgraham748 in between the doors of consciousness

    • @OldDunc
      @OldDunc 3 роки тому +2

      @@davidgraham748 Authoritative biographies are often wrong, as with this. It looks like the quotation comes from Ray Manzarek, who added, "that's us." It's not surprising that the bio was wrong about Blake and Huxley, but odd if it missed Manzarek. Google Quote Investigator for more information.

    • @HaryWoodz
      @HaryWoodz 3 роки тому +4

      "Cocaine's a hell of a drug." -Rick James.

  • @Burte00
    @Burte00 4 роки тому +250

    A flamenco guitarist, jazz drummer, blues organist, and a poet who would occasionally use a tambourine

    • @ysteinedvardsen3096
      @ysteinedvardsen3096 4 роки тому +4

      Densmoore was on the tambourine:)

    • @szqsk8
      @szqsk8 4 роки тому +5

      Øystein Edvardsen That's what I assumed. All the percussion Densmore did in this song is first rate. 👍

    • @Burte00
      @Burte00 4 роки тому

      You both ignored the occasionally, I didn't say he played tambourine on the tracks.

    • @FreakishPower
      @FreakishPower 4 роки тому +8

      You forgot the 5th & 6th members: Booze and drugs. All 6 of them did some world breaking shit tho

    • @jonnuanez2843
      @jonnuanez2843 4 роки тому +8

      Manzarek was classically trained on piano

  • @AM-wt8qi
    @AM-wt8qi 3 роки тому +192

    Hard to believe that three instruments and singer can produce such masterpieces . Genius at work

    • @hamidge1976
      @hamidge1976 2 роки тому +8

      Ray played two instruments he played a key board bass with his feet

    • @luke9947
      @luke9947 2 роки тому +4

      @@hamidge1976 didn’t he play bass keyboard with his left hand? Did he do something different for this song for any reason?

    • @cirofolchini
      @cirofolchini 2 роки тому +6

      @@luke9947 yes, he played with his left hand

    • @buttaflysugababy
      @buttaflysugababy 2 роки тому +2

      So true

    • @Sugarhilljah
      @Sugarhilljah Рік тому +1

      In production they can add many overdubs and they may have even hired a bass player for this track, which they had done on album recordings

  • @jefftaylor2595
    @jefftaylor2595 3 роки тому +55

    The Doors lyrics were deeeeep. This was perfectly featured in Apocalypse Now. Descent into madness.

    • @aurelielagrange2173
      @aurelielagrange2173 Рік тому +1

      I’m way late with this but yes, if it sounds familiar it’s probably from use in “Apocalypse Now”.
      For its allusions, the “mask” makes me think of ancient Greek theater, for theatrical purposes. From there, Oedipus complex-Oedipus, unbeknownst to him, has killed his father (predicted by the oracle at Delphi) & will marry his mother.
      Which is what happens, and Oedipus puts his own eyes out.
      Look into the play Oedipus Rex, and/or Freud’s Oedipus Complex, wherein boys grow up resenting their fathers & want to have sex (or at least spiritually) bond with their mothers, take over the authority of their fathers.
      Something to think about anyway. The Doors were very trippy & Morrison highly literate-was a poet, the lot of The Door were art school guys.
      I love them. 🖤

    • @benhinds2971
      @benhinds2971 Рік тому +2

      It almost wasn't. It was put in after the whole debacle had been filmed. Coppola just happened to come in on a Saturday and someone was listening to it on the radio. Serendipity is a good word for that.

    • @vickimingus9281
      @vickimingus9281 2 місяці тому

      it's coming soon

  • @marcl5942
    @marcl5942 4 роки тому +1798

    This song has been brought to you by the letters LS and D.

    • @jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344
      @jackasswhiskyandpintobeans9344 4 роки тому +80

      LSD and creative intelligence will create great art for a time... then darkness.

    • @sherylbeasley4938
      @sherylbeasley4938 4 роки тому +10

      My friend😌

    • @biggawinnacrapsa3870
      @biggawinnacrapsa3870 4 роки тому +22

      This song has been brought to you by the DeFeo family of Amityville, NY.

    • @troybanger5168
      @troybanger5168 4 роки тому +26

      Most of all the best songs in human history we're done under the influence of some sort of drug or another. Simply amazing

    • @shawncarpenter1972
      @shawncarpenter1972 4 роки тому +29

      Jim was more into hard liquor

  • @TheKing-hb4yy
    @TheKing-hb4yy 4 роки тому +309

    This is one of the greatest songs ever written. No band back then sounded like them. This song will put you in a trance. The Doors rule!

    • @magicpowers
      @magicpowers 4 роки тому +6

      They were true pioneers.

    • @reallymysterious4393
      @reallymysterious4393 4 роки тому +3

      AGREE !!!!

    • @mariamontuori1279
      @mariamontuori1279 4 роки тому

      Yes this is a part of the film, i dont remember the titel,of the film,,
      Its about,Jim and the rebbel in him,,
      To me hé is a guru,,

    • @GedUK
      @GedUK 4 роки тому +2

      @@mariamontuori1279 It's used in Apocalypse Now, though was not written for it

    • @GedUK
      @GedUK 4 роки тому +2

      Their unusual sound is because they didn't have a bass player, which was, and is still, very unusual.

  • @di-annhand5182
    @di-annhand5182 3 роки тому +154

    If you were my age when this song came out and the pervasive paranoia we experienced IE: Duck and cover, Kennedy killed, Martin killed, Bobby killed, Viet Nam this is a song of a generation

    • @ErikOosterwal
      @ErikOosterwal 3 роки тому +9

      It was about the same time as Manson Family murdering the LaBiancas in their home and Sharon Tate and others in the Polanski house.

    • @MrRolando48
      @MrRolando48 3 роки тому

      My respect to you

    • @heatheringlis6006
      @heatheringlis6006 3 роки тому +13

      People now think of the 60s as sex, drugs and rock n' roll, or spaced out hippies, but it was a time of turmoil, rebellion against the 50s and struggle amid the shock of assassinations.

    • @spudjohnsonn8122
      @spudjohnsonn8122 3 роки тому +5

      A great light was put out with those 3 murders & this country has and never will be the same again.

    • @gl15col
      @gl15col 2 роки тому +2

      I was 14 when Robert Kennedy was assassinated. And I lost all trust in the world. I have still voted in every election since I was legally able, but do I think the person I vote for will be the kind of President RFK would have been? No, but you make your choice and pray you aren't contributing to the end of the world. Such is life.

  • @daveversion2.2
    @daveversion2.2 3 роки тому +34

    Such an iconic sound...haunting....even today. His voice was also heavenly.

  • @jakethet3206
    @jakethet3206 4 роки тому +396

    There were only three instrumentalists in the band when this song was recorded, and they didn't use any extra players in the sessions, nor did they overdub anything. The reason it sounds the way it does is because:
    A) John Densmore, the drummer, was a trained jazz drummer, and excellent at it. As jazz fans know, a great jazz drummer can sound like he's two men playing on two kits.
    B) Robby Kreiger, the guitarist, is simply one of the best rock guitarists of all time, and do I need to say anymore?
    C) Ray Manzarek was their keyboardist. Until LA Woman, the band didn't use bassists, so Ray would play the regular keys with one hand while using a smaller keyboard with the other hand the play all the bass lines, thus, the band always had a "four-piece sound." He, too, is one of the best rock keyboardists of all time. What he is capable of when he doesn't have to also play the bass line would probably blow your mind.
    [It is that good a song. One of the best poets, singing his words, backed by three of the best instrumentalist of all time. It just IS that good, standing alone. However, the song WAS most famously used, almost a decade after it was recorded, as the music playing over the mesmerizing opening of Apocalypse Now, gaining the song another generation of fans, and perhaps cementing it in the public consciousness for all time.}
    p.s. Jim didn't play an instrument, but when a dude can write lyrics like that and can sing like that, who gives a shit. Amirite?

    • @tetsuoashima420
      @tetsuoashima420 4 роки тому +11

      Well said. Best comment.

    • @remedy9648
      @remedy9648 4 роки тому +4

      Jake The T. Excellent education on the song and the band. After hearing this song my entire life, I now have more to consider when listening to it again. Peace💜🤘🏿💜

    • @omarlara3506
      @omarlara3506 4 роки тому +4

      Jimmy page is a way better guitarist than Robby Krieger. Just saying. 🤭

    • @coycoberly4162
      @coycoberly4162 4 роки тому

      Agreed sir!

    • @coycoberly4162
      @coycoberly4162 4 роки тому +3

      I agree with Jake the T.
      Amazing Band that was Made in the U.S.A.!!!

  • @randaljbatty
    @randaljbatty 3 роки тому +157

    This is not just another fluffy pop song. It's not a dance tune. Kudos for even attempting to react to it. I think the Oedipus reference is what got the band thrown out of the Whiskey-a-go-go -- a club in Hollywood when no one knew their name. The Doors wanted to push boundaries, and they certainly did it with "The End."

    • @rogernyholm1189
      @rogernyholm1189 3 роки тому +15

      The Whiskey ran them out because Jim got too fucked up too often..Nothing to do with their music or your Oedipus stuff.The Whiskey never was a Cancel Culture bar. Lots of wild bands with equally non-mainstream stuff. Just as much fun drinking with them next door after the show was over at the Rainbow Bar and Grille...

    • @iDuckman
      @iDuckman 2 роки тому +8

      The way I heard it, Jim used rather .. explicit .. lyrics on the Oedipal section. The owner heard it and that was the last straw. Sure got peoples' attention.

    • @billhiggins1882
      @billhiggins1882 2 роки тому +3

      You had to experience the 60's to understand it

    • @notfirstyourlast
      @notfirstyourlast 2 роки тому +2

      @@rogernyholm1189 " your Oedipus stuff" its greek mythology Jim is quoting. Its what the lyrics are about. Ray has mentioned it many a time.

    • @swinde
      @swinde 9 місяців тому

      The Whisky-a-Go-Go helped launch many excellent singers in the 1970s including Elton John, Johnny Rivers, Kris Kristofferson among others.

  • @buttaflysugababy
    @buttaflysugababy 2 роки тому +9

    My fathers one request after he passed was to have this song play, he was a Vietnam veteran. It still haunted him, the things he did and saw, this song just makes me cry

  • @Deguello23
    @Deguello23 2 роки тому +17

    Very few bands that can put a spell on you like these guys could. It's a whole headspace.

  • @gszavics8531
    @gszavics8531 4 роки тому +256

    I wrote a paper on this song in college. The song’s themes and symbolisms are of rebirth, regeneration. The song shocks you with the content, and at the end you have a feeling of relief- a catharsis. That catharsis itself is the meaning of a timeless piece of art. I had to breakdown the song, lyrics, analyze symbolisms, history, the beats, etc. It took me a whole 2 months to research and write it. I got the highest grade in the class. I just picked it because I knew I felt that way when I listened to it the first time, I’d knew it’d work.

    • @eledhwen6967
      @eledhwen6967 4 роки тому +14

      İs there any chance to get a copy of your work? Or a little conversation with you about The Doors? I am really interested.

    • @stephenharper8935
      @stephenharper8935 4 роки тому +3

      Really? I am a simple tradesman but I thought it was just TV. You actually studied this? I lived it. Please post a link to your work if you would. Cheers!

    • @aleisterzsandorsohndesmond9587
      @aleisterzsandorsohndesmond9587 4 роки тому

      You know

    • @blueshorecreative3146
      @blueshorecreative3146 4 роки тому

      you're wrong ha ha. a joke

    • @bigyodatheman
      @bigyodatheman 4 роки тому +2

      That is damn sexy

  • @1111nolanc
    @1111nolanc 4 роки тому +351

    "Apocalypse Now" by Francis Ford Coppala. Martin Sheen freaking out on screen. And off, almost had a breakdown on set.

    • @cherylhurst7093
      @cherylhurst7093 4 роки тому +9

      Martin Sheen was superb in this movie. Didn't know about the breakdown, but I can understand why.

    • @stephaniesunderland1974
      @stephaniesunderland1974 4 роки тому +24

      He had a heart attack on set.

    • @gemineye76
      @gemineye76 4 роки тому +4

      @truthiness 63 It was better than whiskey, it was mescal.

    • @BensSoZen
      @BensSoZen 4 роки тому +28

      I can't hear the intro without also hearing chopper blades in slow motion that they synced with the music in the film

    • @blueshorecreative3146
      @blueshorecreative3146 4 роки тому

      @@stephaniesunderland1974 yes he did, during that scene.

  • @evang7954
    @evang7954 3 роки тому +22

    Jims words still echo hauntingly in my mind. The music just adds to the experience and makes it complete.
    I will forever be waiting for the summer rain.

  • @stadiaplay701
    @stadiaplay701 3 роки тому +54

    jim morrison's dad was responsible for escalating the vietnam war. he was a commanding rear admiral in the navy during the gulf of tonkin incident. he also told his son (morrison) he couldn't sing. morrison's legeacy became his father's (and the usa's) biggest anti-war critic.

    • @benhinds2971
      @benhinds2971 2 роки тому +1

      And now his Father has come around and tried to protect Jim's legacy. Truth and Love will always rear its head in the End. ok that was a corny pun.

    • @mikedoors13
      @mikedoors13 Рік тому

      Yeah boots boots Are his fathers boots The killer put his boots on his military boots Growing up knowing your father is responsible for so much death And suffering is more than anyone could handle anyone with a conscience that is

    • @barryradun6356
      @barryradun6356 Місяць тому

      @@benhinds2971 "And now his Father has come around and tried to protect Jim's legacy." That's bogus. His father died 16 years ago in 2008.

    • @barryradun6356
      @barryradun6356 Місяць тому

      @barryradun6356
      @stadiaplay701
      3 years ago"was responsible for escalating the vietnam war". Not even remotely accurate...
      Wikipedia:
      "In November 1963, Morrison took command of the Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Bon Homme Richard, flagship of the First Fleet's Fifth Carrier Division in the Pacific, based at San Diego, California. The Fifth Carrier Division was transferred to the Seventh Fleet when sent to the Western Pacific early in 1964. Morrison's command of the Fifth Carrier Division did not, as has sometimes been supposed, give him a significant role in the controversial Gulf of Tonkin Incident in August 1964, which increased the level of US involvement in the Vietnam War. The Bon Homme Richard was cruising along the coast of Japan, from Sasebo to Yokosuka, while the incidents were occurring off the coast of North Vietnam.[8]"
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Stephen_Morrison

  • @hollyodell4012
    @hollyodell4012 4 роки тому +106

    This is like he's going on a journey into his own psyche. Facing his primal fears and desires, tapping into the roots of his anger and disillusionment. The music's repetitive like a drone, lulling you into a trance. It's fascinating but also feels dangerous, like you're going down into a sub-basement where there are things nobody wants to see or know about. Such a heavy vibe.

    • @CC-ff7ft
      @CC-ff7ft 4 роки тому +2

      Great break down.

    • @Hugatree1
      @Hugatree1 4 роки тому

      Holly Odell wow! Exactly. I think Jim Morrison, poet extraordinaire was conveying that message and possibly lived in that world for the most part

    • @zoniekat
      @zoniekat 4 роки тому +1

      I'm impressed with your interpretation. I'm not that deep, unfortunately. I just thought he just likes to be outrageous. But your breakdown makes it more relatable.

  • @thefalloutshelter7799
    @thefalloutshelter7799 4 роки тому +622

    this has been in a lot of movies....one that sticks out is Apocopypse Now

    • @michaelmcdonald8452
      @michaelmcdonald8452 4 роки тому +9

      I actually think that’s the only one.

    • @mangodebango
      @mangodebango 4 роки тому +46

      It was also in the movie about The Doors called The Doors

    • @adamb3210
      @adamb3210 4 роки тому +43

      I love the sound of Morrison in the morning.

    • @SonicProfessor_a.k.a._T._Andra
      @SonicProfessor_a.k.a._T._Andra 4 роки тому +16

      Francis Ford Coppola's APOCALYPSE NOW is the most prevalent, strongest, most well-recognized example; indeed.
      ...The spoken vocals (esp. the chanting towards the end) are enhanced, somewhat, for the soundtrack version and the edit is, slightly, different (as I recall).

    • @joehynes5452
      @joehynes5452 4 роки тому +17

      Classic scene to open an epic film

  • @eljensen671
    @eljensen671 3 роки тому +32

    The keyboardist Ray Manzarek wrote a book called "The Poet in Exile" about a very famous singer that fakes his death and is living on an island. Its pretty interesting. Is it true? Who can say...

  • @klausrain111
    @klausrain111 2 роки тому +7

    NOBODY had ever done a song remotely like this before. Serious poet with a beautiful baritone, jazz drummer, unique guitarist influenced by Indian ragas and Flamenco, absolute virtuoso keyboardist. There was a first time for everybody listening to it, but it can be equally powerful on further listenings. The experience might be different each time, depending on your state of mind, and I'm NOT talking about drugs.

  • @Don1970
    @Don1970 4 роки тому +200

    53 year old song that’s still insane, scary, and powerful today.
    Yeah the song fit in nicely with the 1979 Vietnam film Apocalypse Now.

    • @erikwresch5432
      @erikwresch5432 3 роки тому +1

      Man, just realized this song came out the year before I was born and it's now been 53 years!? First beard this when I was about 15. Was only a 14 yearr old song then.

    • @60sbaby456
      @60sbaby456 3 роки тому

      Read up on Jamal, born 1979, apocalypse now, time I was 15, high school kids , doors, fanatics

    • @carpediem523
      @carpediem523 2 роки тому +1

      To think Morrison was is his 20's when he wrote this....

  • @BillB23
    @BillB23 4 роки тому +160

    "I'm gonna hafta listen to this in the dark." LOL, we did that 45 years ago and still love it. I'm glad you enjoy it. It renews my faith in mankind.

    • @beanie237
      @beanie237 4 роки тому +1

      Ha we used to do that at college

    • @shmick6079
      @shmick6079 4 роки тому +8

      Some of the best songs are enhanced by listening in the dark (and perhaps a little accompanying beverage or other substance, lol)

    • @irishwest
      @irishwest 4 роки тому +2

      Shmick ! It’s legal for recreation in Ca (the only redeeming quality to this state)

    • @szqsk8
      @szqsk8 4 роки тому +1

      Justin West Amen to that! Two bong rips and listening to this song with the headphones on in the dark takes you away.......

    • @omarlara3506
      @omarlara3506 4 роки тому +1

      Faith in man kind, really? This song helped to induce acid trips. lol

  • @markrancourt5430
    @markrancourt5430 Рік тому +5

    That group was a legend. The music was deep and still gives me goose bumps. What can I say..

  • @jjflash1645
    @jjflash1645 3 роки тому +51

    If you like this, listen to When the Music’s Over, also by the Doors.

    • @kingelvis5502
      @kingelvis5502 3 роки тому +4

      We want the world and we want it...now........... NOW!!!!

    • @shelley9263
      @shelley9263 2 роки тому +2

      Yes, “ When The Music Is Over!” GREAT!

    • @beckygrant2258
      @beckygrant2258 2 роки тому +2

      I LOVE THAT SONG! When the Music’s Over! Another hypnotic song!

    • @jjflash1645
      @jjflash1645 2 роки тому

      @@beckygrant2258 You’ve got good music taste.

    • @beckygrant2258
      @beckygrant2258 2 роки тому

      Maybe they played it in the film Apocalypse Now?

  • @Blade247
    @Blade247 4 роки тому +155

    The Doors remain a relevant band because their music is timeless..at the time there was a saying... the Beatles an the Rolling Stones were for blowing your mind.... and The Doors were for after your mind was gone.. living through those times I would tend to agree with that sentiment..

    • @mushroom_hatter
      @mushroom_hatter 4 роки тому +7

      um the grateful dead

    • @jimbattista1120
      @jimbattista1120 4 роки тому +3

      Jerry Garcia would disagree with you (~);}

    • @jimbattista1120
      @jimbattista1120 4 роки тому +1

      He should listen to Loser from Dozin at the Knick

    • @Blade247
      @Blade247 4 роки тому +4

      The Dead had quite a following for a long time and good for them. but in terms of music and lyrics, the Doors remain relevant while the Dead's majority of the fan base is hippie and druggie... The Doors still sell ton of music but The Dead doesn't sell anywhere near the Doors.. no offense to any Dead Fans but that's just the way it is..

    • @jimbattista1120
      @jimbattista1120 4 роки тому +2

      You just don't like licorice

  • @narelletuck5082
    @narelletuck5082 4 роки тому +159

    There are things known and things unknown and in between are The Doors.
    "If the doors of perception are cleansed, things would appear as they truly are ... Infinite "

    • @greysonwilson4164
      @greysonwilson4164 4 роки тому +8

      Wise words from aldous himself

    • @nobbynoris
      @nobbynoris 4 роки тому +1

      But what if they're swing doors??

    • @kurtsinger3061
      @kurtsinger3061 4 роки тому +4

      @@greysonwilson4164 I did one of my book reports on the Doors of Perception in High School.

    • @Noogsie_47245
      @Noogsie_47245 4 роки тому +3

      The movie I recall is Appocolypse Now...I think.

    • @RShort27
      @RShort27 4 роки тому +1

      An amazing book to open people's eyes and minds

  • @johncurran6031
    @johncurran6031 3 роки тому +10

    A few years ago I realized that the most understated drummer of the 60's was John Densmore. The Door has a drummer, a guitar play, an organ and a keyboard bass. Sometimes on records they had someone play bass or add some guitar licks. A small group with huge talent and a huge sound.

  • @StanSwan
    @StanSwan 3 роки тому +8

    "When the Music's Over" and "The Soft Parade" are two more epic Doors songs. Jimi Hendrix "1983" is a hidden jewel too. So glad you are into this, I have been a Doors nut since I was a kid, 40+ years.

  • @ronforeman2556
    @ronforeman2556 4 роки тому +99

    Jamal says: "I'm gonna have to listen this again, in the dark!" Exactly.
    Bill writes: "Imagine how the old folk took this song in 1967."
    In 1966, the Air Force pulled my dad and a few other prop-rated pilots out of mothballs, along with a bunch of WW-II vintage C-47s, and deployed them to Vietnam. They flew hush-hush missions out of Nah Trang loaded with "classified" electronic gear designed to intercept enemy radio transmissions, pinpoint their locations on the ground, and transmit that info to artillery units and fighter bombers in the area.
    My dad was in his mid-40s by then, in the war and doing his duty, and my eldest brother was a year away from becoming eligible for the draft, dreading the war and determined to do everything he could to avoid it. My dad didn't get The Doors at all. The younger guys on base played the grooves off the band's debut album, but theirs was a musical language my dad could not begin to understand, so he chose to mock it as "bangy bangy music." Meanwhile, back home in "the world," the band and their vibe sure connected with his impressionable sons.
    My dad returned from his tour of duty in February 1968, just as American and South Vietnamese forces were mopping up after the Communist Tet Offensive. Within a month, the family had packed up and were off for a two-year assignment to Bangkok, Thailand. My eldest brother, who was in his first year of college by then, stayed behind. And the gulf between him and my dad would only grow wider.
    The music of The Doors and the bewilderment of the Vietnam War were already melded in my mind long before I experienced Francis Ford Coppola's "Apocalypse Now," when it premiered in 1979. The social and personal upheaval of those years--along with all the drugs, alcohol, and adultery--bifurcated my family and ultimately tore us apart. The marriage of music and images in the opening minutes of that film perfectly captured what it was like to live through those times. Was it real, or did we just imagine it?
    I was 11 in the winter of 1967 when I first heard "The End," late at night, broadcast on KWFM, our local stereo album rock radio station (which was really something NEW in those days). DJs would give us a heads up that they'd be playing it, so it was "appointment listening."
    Most of us, who are "old folk" now, were introduced to The Doors when we heard "Light My Fire" on the radio. The band's label, Elecktra Records, had hedged their bets by releasing the song as a single with the truncated, 2:52 version on one side and the unexpurgated, 6:50 version on the other. When Top 40 AM stations played the shortened "Light My Fire," their phones lit up--with kids insisting that they play the "long one."
    Those of us fortunate enough to have an FM rock station in town called DJs there and requested that THEY play the album cut. Then, college kids who bought the album called in to the FM station to DEMAND that the play "The End," because they thought all their peers needed to hear it, too.
    After hearing the 6:50 album version of "Light My Fire," I seriously thought about getting the album with my paper route money. But after I heard THIS SONG, I ran right down to my local record store/head shop and bought it. And I also got "Strange Days," "The Doors" follow-up album, the day it was released, without having heard a single song from it.

    • @d0sitmatr
      @d0sitmatr 4 роки тому +9

      your story sums things up quite nicely, my father was a ww2 veteran, who got shot both in the japanese offensive and Normandy. my brother (10 yrs my senior) was just coming into his teens around this time and it created a tremendous rift between him and my father.
      they never reconciled before my dad's passing.
      that said, my brother never "came back" so to speak, to the family, and to this day, we hardly ever talk and never see one another. (mostly by his choice)
      sad really, as while growing up, I always looked up to him, he was my hero.

    • @chrisbarrettFilmstudio
      @chrisbarrettFilmstudio 4 роки тому +3

      ronforeman the doors are one of my favorite groups because of how they can invoke certain things that are hard to explain. But your story reminds me a story of how my grandfather who is around your age was too young to go to Woodstock, even though two of his older brothers who were back from nam were going, eventually ended up going to the jam at the Glen with the band, the dead, and the Allman brothers. Two of the biggest concerts in history he went to the larger of the two even though he wanted to go to Woodstock.

    • @remedy9648
      @remedy9648 4 роки тому +2

      ronforeman that’s an incredible story, thanks so much for sharing it. Peace💜🤘🏿💜

    • @coycoberly4162
      @coycoberly4162 4 роки тому +2

      Awesome Story! Great description! AMAZING musical taste!

    • @donaldkgarman296
      @donaldkgarman296 4 роки тому +1

      PUFF THE MAGIC DRAGON.....C 47 ELAD

  • @Pohleece222
    @Pohleece222 4 роки тому +98

    Saw them live in '68 at the Lyric Theater in Baltimore, MD. I was 17 and it was concert I will never forget.

    • @arleneirizarry8468
      @arleneirizarry8468 3 роки тому +2

      Damn, years before I was born...I'm f***in jealous!!!🤨

    • @dogsareprecious4842
      @dogsareprecious4842 3 роки тому +2

      I'm sure you never will !!! :-) My Dad was a concert promoter in DC and put them in concert
      before they were famous. Dad took piks with almost EVERY musician he ever met....but did NOT get a pik with the Doors....oh, I wish! :-)

    • @rickwitkowski4498
      @rickwitkowski4498 3 роки тому +5

      My old man was a manager at a small store in Glendora, CA and it was about 1967 or so. The Doors played in the parking lot of this little strip mall and I was there with my dad. What a memory. Man.

    • @theophilhist6455
      @theophilhist6455 3 роки тому +5

      saw them at the Spectrum in Philadelphia 1968.... Jamal needs to get some of us 70 year old survivors to help with his interpretation

    • @johnnyweedseed8056
      @johnnyweedseed8056 3 роки тому +1

      Omg lucky you my friend!!

  • @stevesmith7412
    @stevesmith7412 3 роки тому +6

    Man, I love your reactions at the drum breaks. Also love how engrossed you get in your videos.

  • @swami1
    @swami1 3 роки тому +23

    This was used as the backdrop for the opening scene of "Apocalypse Now". It was one of the spookiest, most perfect opening scenes in cinematic history.

  • @jamesboyd5305
    @jamesboyd5305 3 роки тому +156

    "APOCALYPSE NOW " my favorite movie...never get off the boat!

    • @conkeramidas1912
      @conkeramidas1912 3 роки тому +4

      Been on the boat for a very long time.

    • @davidmummery3076
      @davidmummery3076 3 роки тому +6

      "I told you not to stop."

    • @jamesboyd5305
      @jamesboyd5305 3 роки тому +1

      @@davidmummery3076 that was after he opened up ....

    • @jimmeyer9106
      @jimmeyer9106 2 роки тому +2

      haha it was just a fucking puppy

    • @GregCombs100
      @GregCombs100 2 роки тому +1

      Not unless you plan to go all the way.

  • @milwaukeegina1480
    @milwaukeegina1480 4 роки тому +267

    Just found this channel and it’s my therapy especially during these times.

  • @wayneshill2422
    @wayneshill2422 Рік тому +1

    I always feel like I have a good friend listening to you while I listen by my self, thanks so much for you reactions. You give so much good with your channel. Your the best brother. Thanks for sharing.

  • @blue-fj9ky
    @blue-fj9ky 7 місяців тому

    Long time Doors fan. I saw them perform The End live in 1967. Love your reaction and your upbeat approach! Nice channel!

  • @robwilliamson9056
    @robwilliamson9056 4 роки тому +512

    You’ve just entered the mind of Jim Morrison, be careful it’s a bad neighborhood

    • @Demitrival
      @Demitrival 4 роки тому +3

      Rob Williamson I don’t get it

    • @Demitrival
      @Demitrival 4 роки тому

      James Fox I wonder what those demons were

    • @dalegrim5858
      @dalegrim5858 4 роки тому +4

      @@Demitrival privacy. Not having a normal life. Too many expectations of himself to be better and better. And there is no level above where he was. The world of music would be alot diff if he and a few other true artists would have lived. Even some today that passed. Everything in moderation man. Excess will cause distress and death.

    • @Demitrival
      @Demitrival 4 роки тому

      James Fox thank you. I’ll check them out

    • @Demitrival
      @Demitrival 4 роки тому +3

      Dale Grim wow especially since ppl didn’t quite understand how stardom could negatively effect an artists psyche. Can’t imagine how artist today cope with stardom all day will mass media.

  • @emilianorodriguez8638
    @emilianorodriguez8638 4 роки тому +150

    “If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite” -William Blake

    • @jameskresl
      @jameskresl 3 роки тому +1

      Fact

    • @buddhastaxi666
      @buddhastaxi666 3 роки тому +2

      Doors ....transition...Doors....a band...we dropped out turned on tuned in

    • @32artjenkins
      @32artjenkins 3 роки тому +1

      It was at the beginning of Apocalypse Now!

    • @esztervarga7641
      @esztervarga7641 3 роки тому

      Amen

    • @MonkeyKing3333
      @MonkeyKing3333 3 роки тому

      Damn I always thought that was Aldous Huxley.

  • @montywoodley6357
    @montywoodley6357 2 роки тому +5

    Every time I hear this song from The doors, it reminds me of my identical twin brothers. One of them died at the early age of 32. Even though I lost your brother, I could see it in my other brother. There was a piece of my brother that died that I could see my brother that lives as a twin. My brother requested that if he ever died to play this song at the funeral. I could not give him that wish. Because I don't think my mom or dad could have stand this song being played at the funeral services. I discussed it with my other brother so we all agreed. We just can't do that to Mom or Dad. My brother dying at the age of 32, he was taken from this world early. If you knew him he loved fishing, when he'd asked me to go I would always go. Memory so I love them, he would tell me all the time how proud he was me being the Middle brother. I told him whatever he does I'm proud of him too. Yeah songs bring back memories. I love you Randy, and I miss you very much. I hope in the future that we can meet each other again with judgment day comes.

    • @mnmade9062
      @mnmade9062 2 роки тому +2

      Your words clearly convey what you’re feeling. Thanks for sharing that man.

    • @darylgray8111
      @darylgray8111 Рік тому

      Sad.

  • @chelsea6804
    @chelsea6804 2 роки тому +1

    This was in "Apocalypse Now." Thanks for the reaction. Love the Doors!

  • @craigmeek3363
    @craigmeek3363 4 роки тому +265

    Yes this song was in a movie Apocalypse Now

    • @davideldridge9021
      @davideldridge9021 4 роки тому +16

      And so perfectly placed I might add.

    • @jeexbit
      @jeexbit 4 роки тому +10

      Now THAT movie would make quite a reaction video... also the "making of" movie is a must-see: Hearts of Darkness

    • @whispermason8052
      @whispermason8052 4 роки тому +30

      But it's not FROM the movie. It was one of the Doors Signature songs, and they USED IT as the title Track for Apocalypse Now.

    • @whiteman2707
      @whiteman2707 4 роки тому +8

      Yes, the movie was Apocalypse Now, but the movie came out over 10 years later. The song was not made for the movie, you could say the movie was made around the song.
      Also another interesting fact about the song, the part about the killer when he gets to his mother's room, there's something that he said that was obscured. It was really outrageous, I don't think you can still say it nowadays, but they revealed it in the Doors movie. I won't say what he said, but it would have easily gotten the song and the record banned.

    • @Oxmustube
      @Oxmustube 4 роки тому +8

      The question is, is there a Vietnam movie WITHOUT this song?

  • @gergatronic
    @gergatronic 4 роки тому +51

    Re: the amount of musicians....
    4 members:
    Robby Krieger - Guitar
    John Densmore - Drums
    Ray Manzerak - keyboard/bass
    Jim Morrison - vocals
    The reason for such a full sound is Ray. He managed to do keyboards and bass (also on keys) simultaneously. He was a truly gifted musician. This recording was done live with minimal (or no) overdubs, on a 4 track system, using only 3 of the tracks Their combined musicianship is what makes this recording, not any fancy production techniques.
    The Doors were so much more than Jim.

    • @ericclarke6107
      @ericclarke6107 4 роки тому +2

      Aside from popular belief, they used several studio musician bass players on their later records to fill out the sound. This is well documented.

    • @FFVison
      @FFVison 4 роки тому +2

      In addition, Robby Krieger also played guitar finger style, which allowed him to play some pretty complex stuff that you cannot do with a pick.

    • @jameswarner5809
      @jameswarner5809 4 роки тому +1

      Pretty sure Ray played bass pedals.

    • @gergatronic
      @gergatronic 4 роки тому

      @@jameswarner5809 uhh that's a negative.... His bass player was "lefty". It would do its own thing while he improvised with righty.

    • @gergatronic
      @gergatronic 4 роки тому

      @@ericclarke6107 yes even from the first album they got session bass players in on selected songs, either to supplement the keyboard bass sound or provide the bass outright. However live, they either got a ghost player in or relied solely on Ray's left hand on the Fender Rhodes (not sure on that)

  • @reepacheirpfirewalker8629
    @reepacheirpfirewalker8629 2 роки тому +2

    I was so hoping that you had reviewed this song. it's so central to this bands backbone of creativity.

  • @lyndon.barrett
    @lyndon.barrett 3 роки тому +1

    Great reaction! I wake up everyday to this song

  • @beardo52
    @beardo52 4 роки тому +88

    This song was recorded live in the Studio, with no overdubbing, and is the second of two takes. Four men were in the Band.

    • @kevinlay9902
      @kevinlay9902 4 роки тому +8

      Four members with only 3 playing instruments.

    • @morgangosling8673
      @morgangosling8673 4 роки тому +7

      @@kevinlay9902 Although one (Ray) was playing two at the same time.

    • @sakatababa
      @sakatababa 4 роки тому +1

      the famous wall of sound

    • @theliberalrepublican5910
      @theliberalrepublican5910 4 роки тому +7

      @@morgangosling8673 Ray Manzarek was playing keyboards with his right, and a keyboard bass with his left. The Doors had no bass guitar, it was Ray Manzarek on keyboard bass

    • @paulbeahm3891
      @paulbeahm3891 4 роки тому +2

      5 actually...
      Manzarek counts as 2 everyone knows that.

  • @georgekraft1401
    @georgekraft1401 4 роки тому +134

    This song was used in movies, but was not written for a movie.

    • @tahoerheanevada2997
      @tahoerheanevada2997 4 роки тому +14

      True, but Coppola was also a film student with Morrison and Manzarek, and *knew* he always wanted to use it in a movie.
      So, through their friendship, was able to obtain the rights to the master tapes. Obviously, later used it to masterful effect in Apocalypse Now.

    • @georgekraft1401
      @georgekraft1401 4 роки тому +4

      Wow! Great little nugget there.

    • @jonlockwood248
      @jonlockwood248 4 роки тому +4

      It was in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

    • @megacheeseheadmegacheesehe2889
      @megacheeseheadmegacheesehe2889 4 роки тому +5

      Opening song in Apocalypse Now.

    • @stevensellars5587
      @stevensellars5587 4 роки тому +4

      @@tahoerheanevada2997 The End was a great fit for Apocalypse Now, which was a great adaptation of Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. The song, on repeat, is great accompaniment to reading the book, as messed up as the book is.

  • @thecoolkilla
    @thecoolkilla Рік тому

    A testament to all things magical in this life. Every time i hear this piece , i'm astounded just that little bit more. It's like it's the first time i've heard it , and nothing is going to be the same ever again. Little tweaks and twists on things that i thought were familiar, seem to have an entity of their own . Always evolving. Growing , changing .Very, very cool .

  • @randycollins7699
    @randycollins7699 2 роки тому +6

    my favorite Doors song... i use their lyrics from this song often when I'm ending my computer programming scripts. my workmates know I'm a Doors fan. :-)

  • @digbicmcgeegaming2581
    @digbicmcgeegaming2581 4 роки тому +132

    You are by far my favorite reaction youtuber. Your expressions seem so genuine and it brings a smile to my face when I get to see you experience a song I know well. It kind of feels like I get to experience something beautiful for the first time all over again.
    Segue into my request/suggestion:
    Check out Suicidal Tendencies especially "How Will I Laugh Tomorrow... if I Cant Even Smile Today", an "Institutionalized"
    Cheers brother, and keep up the good work.

  • @brendamilloy2557
    @brendamilloy2557 3 роки тому +80

    Jim reveled in revealing the dark side of humanity. Most of us are too afraid to do that. He did it for us. Most people consider the dark side to be our greatest enemy. But they also say "know your enemy". Are you ready?

    • @33melissaj
      @33melissaj 3 роки тому +2

      Well put.

    • @stevevanscoik398
      @stevevanscoik398 2 роки тому +4

      When you stare into the abyss the abyss stares back. This is kicking open the doors of perception.

    • @hendrikdebruin4012
      @hendrikdebruin4012 2 роки тому +4

      I agree with you fully. many people have many dark thoughts that they suppress and dare never verbalize. But they think them and feel guilt or not. This is the root of most aberrant behavior. You must confront your demons to become a whole human being.

    • @Poopscipade
      @Poopscipade Рік тому

      @@hendrikdebruin4012 It's too bad Kim didn't live long enough to see that through...

  • @kingelvis5502
    @kingelvis5502 3 роки тому

    I love younger generations are experiencing this!
    I was lucky enough to have experienced the Doors at the really young age of 10. Morrisons poetry and the ethereal notes of Manzericks organ always captivated my imagination and the hard hitting blues got my body moving!

  • @jasonburton6452
    @jasonburton6452 3 роки тому

    i cant u made it through by far my favorite door song, props man

  • @gabrielaguilar1391
    @gabrielaguilar1391 4 роки тому +40

    John Densmores drumming us amazing on this song. His volume and dynamics are superb! Very underrated!

    • @ranica47
      @ranica47 4 роки тому +3

      Amazing drumming, agreed 🤝

    • @ranica47
      @ranica47 4 роки тому +2

      @@mitchellhughes5180 No. Freaking. Way.
      That's amazing!! 😀

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud 4 роки тому

      The perfect drummer for Jim.... he was able to accent Jim plus able to set up the framework of the large scale scapes.

  • @paulsharkey6576
    @paulsharkey6576 4 роки тому +41

    The Crystal Ship is beautiful, too.

  • @kayp2617
    @kayp2617 3 роки тому +7

    NOBODY else in my circle got this (I’m 48 and I was about 21 at the time). I would just sit really still totally alone and listen to it over and over

  • @susanoneill370
    @susanoneill370 3 роки тому

    Yes, Jamel, so many movies. I'm sure someone has mentioned how many revered directors are Morrison/Doors fans. It's no surprise Stone made a film about them. I learned to play acoustic, bleeding and building callus to so many early Beatles tunes...and "Love Her Madly." Then, stoned, and in for the night as a young teen, discovered more Doors. "The End" lured me into the rabbit hole. Jim inspired interest in poetry never taught in school and his everything else was always there with me in the dark. Talk about brilliant and god-like...i remember first listening to "Soft Parade", staring at Jim's American Poet poster and truly transforming creatively. Inspirational is an understatement. All uniquely talented. RIP Jim and Ray. Gonna go put on some "Peace Frog." Jamel, you'd love that groove!!

  • @kabluey_louie1718
    @kabluey_louie1718 3 роки тому +97

    "The killer awoke before dawn
    He put his boots on
    Took a face from the ancient gallery and he, walked on down the hall."

    • @alexanderhanksx
      @alexanderhanksx 3 роки тому +1

      Took a FAce

    • @redhen2470
      @redhen2470 3 роки тому +1

      Joker has entered chat:

    • @SW-jg7yh
      @SW-jg7yh 3 роки тому

      Oedipus-GASM

    • @sallyshipwreck4315
      @sallyshipwreck4315 3 роки тому +1

      Reminds me of Ayra i Game of Thrones. Influenced by the Doors?

    • @TommiBrem
      @TommiBrem 3 роки тому

      Zappa did a brilliant spoof of that. "Tiny Sick Tears"

  • @rhondaserges5136
    @rhondaserges5136 3 роки тому +40

    vocalist Jim Morrison, keyboardist Ray Manzarek, guitarist Robby Krieger, and drummer John Densmore. The keyboard player Ray was magic.

    • @rafehr1378
      @rafehr1378 2 роки тому

      Ray wrote all the music.

  • @TheCupiedoll
    @TheCupiedoll 3 роки тому +1

    This song is so spiritual. Love you got the rights to the reaction!

  • @matthewblue7839
    @matthewblue7839 2 роки тому +2

    The band name, was a reference to the English writer Aldus Huxley’s book, The doors of perception. In this song, I think the doors reference is both literal, the character is actually opening doors and figurative in the sense that our experiences in life result from choices and the extremes we might go to in those experience. Jim’s use of drugs snd alcohol could be seen as attempts by him to alter and to transcend his (society’s?), normal perceptions and norms to be creative and or to challenge more conservative values. Jim was in a way an intellectual provocateur: prepared to challenge many norms. A unique perspective and a truly great band.

  • @SaltyPirate71
    @SaltyPirate71 4 роки тому +65

    The most awesome reaction I've ever seen at 9:25! That look was freaking golden! I knew it was coming when you were still kinda smiling 30 seconds before. I was thinking, "this is about to go sideways and bake his bean". Lmao

    • @loriholman6125
      @loriholman6125 3 роки тому +1

      So funny his expression... LOVE IT!!!
      💥GUY'S WE WERE REALLY FK.UP TO LISTEN TO THIS, SO GLAD I DIDNT MISS A THING!!!😭
      R.I.P. JEFF BEAN ❤❤❤

    • @chuckwilliams6261
      @chuckwilliams6261 3 роки тому +2

      Just started the video, that must be when Jim goes Oedipal.

    • @SaltyPirate71
      @SaltyPirate71 3 роки тому

      @@chuckwilliams6261 yeah

  • @rxqueen1540
    @rxqueen1540 4 роки тому +26

    this is my favorite doors song probably ever made, it’s so hauntingly beautiful. just like jim morrison.

  • @Buzzywhumpa
    @Buzzywhumpa 3 роки тому

    This song is so rich in flavor I came here for the comments in reactions that are so pure add pure class and a genuine purity to the emotion of the intent. poetic

  • @di-annhand5182
    @di-annhand5182 3 роки тому

    PS best WTF reaction ever. I anticipated it but you delivered it grandly. Thank you.

  • @jesussanchez-bm3hc
    @jesussanchez-bm3hc 3 роки тому +69

    He's the lizard king
    He can do anything

  • @fabio7176
    @fabio7176 4 роки тому +24

    This song came out as part of the seminal Doors album in the "Summer of Love" 1967. Francis Ford Coppola, the Director of Apocalypse Now was in film school with Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek at UCLA. So, when Coppola directed the film, he always had "The End" as an integral part of the movie.
    Jim Morrison - lead vocals
    Robbie Kreiger - guitar
    Ray Manzarek - Keyboards (Bass Pedal through Keyboards in first couple of albums.)
    John Densmore - Drums

  • @danielmarone5757
    @danielmarone5757 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for playing my my song...Jim and I went crazy when we wrote it.

  • @svanheesvelde
    @svanheesvelde 3 роки тому

    I love u, man. Listening this in the dark on repeat 1000 times ... ❤❤❤

  • @hazelvee9793
    @hazelvee9793 4 роки тому +127

    Next “Peace Frog” , “Soul Kitchen” , “LA Woman” , “Back Door Man”

    • @Blackdog06019
      @Blackdog06019 4 роки тому +3

      And the Ghost Song. An absolute masterpiece after his death.

    • @reemclaughlin4260
      @reemclaughlin4260 4 роки тому +5

      LA Woman is classic rock and Peace Frog is cute & lite compared to this. ✌🏼

    • @bobmanob666
      @bobmanob666 4 роки тому +6

      Texas radio and the big beat FTW

    • @limitlesscrack9157
      @limitlesscrack9157 4 роки тому +3

      Crystal Ship

    • @jimbattista1120
      @jimbattista1120 4 роки тому +3

      Any thing from Morrison Hotel

  • @jacobusderottmann1000
    @jacobusderottmann1000 4 роки тому +64

    The beginning of this song was actually a breakup with a girlfriend - just like the initial part sounds. As they played in clubs around SoCal, Morrison added verses with deeper ideas and it grew into the mindfuck epic it is.
    Since it was released in 1967 and Apocalypse Now was 1979, it really was a standalone song for 12 years before the movie.
    And as others have said, it was just three very talented instrumentalists plus Jim's occasional tambourine doing all this.

    • @roberttaylor7064
      @roberttaylor7064 3 роки тому +3

      Jim also played Harmonica 👍

    • @dbitgood1
      @dbitgood1 3 роки тому +1

      Densmore played tambourine in the concert footage I've seen.

    • @swinde
      @swinde 3 роки тому +2

      When a song like this hits a blockbuster movie score, the appreciation of it explodes. Many songs have been featured in movies that were from the 60s-80s years. I wish today's music had classics like this. There are some, but far fewer.

    • @gladtobefreeagain7375
      @gladtobefreeagain7375 3 роки тому +2

      All the Doors songs have an undeniable cinematic, Los Angeles quality to them. They are larger than life & speak of the great societal rifts (Vietnam war draft, psychedelic period, drug & sexual revolution & mass murder including Manson family serial murderers). So naturally filmmakers would want to include this music to duplicate the mood. I sure hope The Doors received a lot of money for their original music. Today, it would be optioned before it was released to the public.

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah, there’s a number of different versions on UA-cam. About midway, Morrison would just improvise and free associate.

  • @misdamagoo213
    @misdamagoo213 2 роки тому

    Lol ......... one of ya best man. Great reaction to great song. Yes. What u thought happened is what he meant. Oh Mama ..........

  • @wayneachen3568
    @wayneachen3568 3 роки тому +1

    I first heard a doors song when I was 6. It was ‘73 and have been a fan ever since.

  • @craighiebert3384
    @craighiebert3384 4 роки тому +48

    4 members - Jim Morrison, Ray Manzerek, Robbie Krieger, John Densmore. Jim was an entire show by himself!

    • @andreshernandez1180
      @andreshernandez1180 4 роки тому

      Also Jim’s faithful companions, booze, weed and lsd.

    • @Sweetjudiblueyes
      @Sweetjudiblueyes 4 роки тому

      Craig Hiebert no bass player

    • @craighiebert3384
      @craighiebert3384 4 роки тому +1

      @@Sweetjudiblueyes Correct, Ray used those foot pedals for bass (I believe) - someone correct me if I'm wrong

    • @NateB1976
      @NateB1976 4 роки тому +4

      You're close. He played the organ with one hand while playing a bass piano with the other. Simultaneously.

    • @Pink_Freud_Obscured_By_Crowds
      @Pink_Freud_Obscured_By_Crowds 4 роки тому +2

      @@craighiebert3384 The Doors decided to use a bass guitar for all songs on LA Woman. They brought into the studio session player Jerry Scheff to play bass on all the tracks. That was the only time.

  • @briantaylor5601
    @briantaylor5601 4 роки тому +48

    One of the most underrated Doors song, IMO, is "When the Music's Over"--you won't regret that one. It's another long one, and I recommend the live version, which is even longer.

    • @billastell3753
      @billastell3753 4 роки тому

      Under rated by who?

    • @briantaylor5601
      @briantaylor5601 4 роки тому +1

      Bill Astell ... underrated by the fact that it never is played anywhere and hardly anyone knows it. Maybe I should have said “secret gems” instead?

    • @stornkolson
      @stornkolson 4 роки тому +2

      Live version from Miami is insane

    • @focalized
      @focalized 4 роки тому +1

      Underrated? You just made a really stupid UA-cam comment that will survive as long as computers last.

    • @briantaylor5601
      @briantaylor5601 4 роки тому +2

      focalized ... Jesus, it’s a figure of speech. It’s a song that, IMO, doesn’t receive the proper air time and love that it should get for how great it is, especially compared to some of their other popular songs. Calm down and breathe.

  • @DeidreL9
    @DeidreL9 2 роки тому

    Jamel, they used this in Apocalypse Now. It’s frigging beyond awesome. It takes me so far away. And all the children are insane…Brilliant ❤️

  • @andrewlord3231
    @andrewlord3231 7 місяців тому

    Great reaction first heard this track in 1981 keep it up from the uk

  • @clemdane
    @clemdane 4 роки тому +32

    I literally get chills every time I hear this, no matter how many times I play it.

  • @Trucker231610
    @Trucker231610 4 роки тому +100

    When the music's over is another great Doors song.

    • @cynergy4
      @cynergy4 4 роки тому +8

      my personal fave

    • @Trucker231610
      @Trucker231610 4 роки тому +5

      Yes it's my favorite also. Not one that got alot of radio play.

    • @DaveThomson
      @DaveThomson 4 роки тому +3

      That and waiting for the sun are my top two

    • @marcreed4031
      @marcreed4031 4 роки тому +3

      Thanks for the reaction! The doors will take you on a trip like no other. "When the music's over" is also a great song along with many others.

    • @nomoreinhellpodcasts5332
      @nomoreinhellpodcasts5332 4 роки тому +2

      Totally agree, I recommended that one in a previous video. Hopefully now that he has his first song down from The Doors, many more of their track will be on the way!

  • @davidwhitney1171
    @davidwhitney1171 2 роки тому +1

    My teenage sister introduced me to The Doors 🚪 in 1967 by playing this album for me, including of course this epic, when I was nine years old. No explanations, she just told me to listen and try to understand it. Even at that age I became a lifelong Doors fan. We'd talk later; she answered my questions best she could. She passed away 20 years ago at 47; of course I think of her and miss her whenever I hear this. "Beautiful Friend," "This is The End" can entail anyone in your life, not necessarily or only a romantic partner or lover...

  • @3dfossils
    @3dfossils 2 роки тому

    dude i love it. your comments are the best

  • @jackslater4060
    @jackslater4060 4 роки тому +44

    The blue bus could be a reference to the 1966 "blue" military ambulance used in Vietnam as a surgical hospital. " The blue bus is calling us, Driver where are you taking us" .... for some military personnel it would be the end. This was how this song was explained to me some 40 plus year ago. Vietnam war was during my time period.

    • @kelvinkloud
      @kelvinkloud 4 роки тому +7

      Good point.... there was also a public bus line in LA and the buses were blue. Jim used that bus when he lived in Venice and when he was at UCLA.... your reference symbol though is plausible b/c I think he followed nam, even in 66, closer then most, b/c his father was there. Plus he read like a madman, and probably knew friends he grew up with that were over there...... it’s a vital symbol either way. Morrison was at his best writing large scale epic narratives. Blake influenced symbolism is the key in understanding the meaning and map of the narrative. In the best of his large scale works, there is always a movement symbol which is key. Here it is the snake and bus. In riders it is the car and the open desolate hiway. In wasp it’s soundwaves and the movement of western culture across n amer. In la woman it’s the modern car across the city and suburban roads out to the desert... it gives the works a broader transcending agent.

    • @donswanson1541
      @donswanson1541 4 роки тому +1

      Blue buses took draftees to improssing

    • @toughsoft321
      @toughsoft321 4 роки тому +1

      The "blue bus" is a drug reference.

  • @davidmiller4594
    @davidmiller4594 4 роки тому +164

    Morrison was a poet who stumbled into the music scene

    • @winddmmy
      @winddmmy 4 роки тому +6

      @David Miller he did the music first and then did his poetry under the name james morrison he did not want people to buy his poems just because of his music wild flowers is a complete book of his poems read it,

    • @grantwatt4559
      @grantwatt4559 4 роки тому +12

      I think the music scene bumped into Morrison, and are still trying to gather their faculties.

    • @davidmiller4594
      @davidmiller4594 4 роки тому +8

      @@winddmmy
      Thanks. I do have a copy.
      From what I heard, he always did poetry and that came first. Just never got published until his fame.
      Either way, if I could sit down to a beer and have a moment with a dead person, Jim would definitely be one of them.
      BTW, that book is worthy of a UA-cam channel in itself. I gotta get it out again now that you've mentioned it.

    • @jesseg94
      @jesseg94 4 роки тому +2

      @@winddmmy yeah from what I read as well he was adamant in becoming a published poet and would go to poetry nights in bars or something like that to recite his works.

    • @omnipotentok6845
      @omnipotentok6845 4 роки тому +3

      @@winddmmy no he definitely embraced poetry before he became a musician

  • @chrisbeecroft6058
    @chrisbeecroft6058 2 роки тому +2

    There is simply no other song remotely like it. Straight up mindblowing.

  • @elkabong6429
    @elkabong6429 2 роки тому

    My first acid trip was to this song. It always brings flash backs and this would be, in my case, going back to 1975…I’m going to listen again now (elsewhere, without interruptions), with my good headsets! Thanks for the suggestion and memories!

  • @notoriousbickz
    @notoriousbickz 3 роки тому +47

    One of the best songs ever performed! Glad you liked it!

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta 4 роки тому +53

    And at 9:46, our host realizes he has stumbled onto a crime scene.

  • @melissatuel862
    @melissatuel862 2 роки тому

    My husband was in Vietnam 1970 - 72 and still has nightmares/flashbacks. He rarely talks about it, but I think this one and "Riders On the Storm" take him back more than other songs. I am 13 years younger than him and barely remember the POWs coming home, but have learned alot from him. Thank you all for your service.

  • @James-wv3hx
    @James-wv3hx 5 місяців тому

    Great reaction video. I had to share it with Doors fans. Thanks 👍.

  • @fabio7176
    @fabio7176 4 роки тому +73

    The Doors got their name from Aldous Huxley's, "Doors of Perception."

    • @Laudanum-gq3bl
      @Laudanum-gq3bl 3 роки тому +5

      Which IIRC was a riff on William Blake’s line, “If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite.”

    • @redrzr56
      @redrzr56 3 роки тому

      There is the Known, and there is the Unknown. And in between lies.....The Doors

    • @32446
      @32446 3 роки тому

      Great book

  • @aaronbarrera1657
    @aaronbarrera1657 3 роки тому +34

    Love that you listened to this in January before pandemic life. Morrison was a fan of old literature, so the father and mother bit was actually a reference to Oedipus Rex where Oedipus kills his father and sleeps with his mother. This also began as a quick love song and just morphed into this epic piece.

  • @craigmorris4083
    @craigmorris4083 2 роки тому

    Dude...seeing your reaction to the Oedipal section...that was priceless. :)

  • @josephkrawczeski1121
    @josephkrawczeski1121 3 роки тому

    Three musicians, one singer. Amazing talents.