This section contains 251 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
["The End"] was the first major statement of the Doors' perennial themes: dread, violence, guilt without possibility of redemption, the miscarriages of love, and, most of all, death.
Nevertheless, the last time I heard "The End," it sounded funny. Even by Strange Days, the second Doors album, it was becoming apparent that the group was limited, and that Morrison's "Lizard King" vision was usually morbid in the most obvious possible way, and thus cheap. The whole nightmare easily translated into parody—and there was a supremely sad irony here….
[The] Doors' artistic stock had hit an all-time low with The Soft Parade…. Relying more and more on brass, strings, and anything else they could bring in, they had not only failed to live up to their original promise—they had (Morrison had) turned what they represented into a joke. Morrison Hotel, released in early 1970, redeemed them some-what, but...
This section contains 251 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |