| A1 | Break On Through (To The Other Side) | 2:25 | ||
| A2 | Soul Kitchen | 3:30 | ||
| A3 | The Crystal Ship | 2:30 | ||
| A4 | Twentieth Century Fox | 2:30 | ||
| A5 | Alabama Song (Whisky Bar) | 3:15 | ||
| A6 | Light My Fire | 6:50 | ||
| B1 | Back Door Man | 3:30 | ||
| B2 | I Looked At You | 2:18 | ||
| B3 | End Of The Night | 2:49 | ||
| B4 | Take It As It Comes | 2:13 | ||
| B5 | The End | 11:35 |
And I love Howlin' Wolf. But I'd rather hear this white boys' rendering of his classic "Back Door Man" than the great blues man's version. So sue me. And tell me how white boys can't do blues. I'll laugh in your face.
The two weakest cuts of the album follow. "I Looked at You" and "Take It As It Comes" are forgettable tunes. "End of the Night" is certified Morrison spookiness, leading up to "The End"...which people either love or hate. I think it rambles on for far too long, containing some of Morrison's worst lyrics, along with some of his best. The "Oedipal" sequence is truly inspired.
Say what you want to about Morrison. He was a self-destructive alcoholic. Indulgent on stage and off, the man was on a mission. I think Morrison really wanted to change the world through his work. When he found out he was only a "pop star" he became depressed, got fat and died, as they say.
It was another time. Now we have the MTV generations, and we have uninspired "pop stars" who are weird just to be weird. Which makes me sadly miss groups like the Doors.
The Doors' went on to do some great albums. "Strange Days" is nearly as good. And Jim went out like a phoenix on "L.A. Woman". But this album is so good it was hard to replicate. One of the best lps of the late sixties, no doubt.