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Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The Doors Free Watch country USA Watch Here gostream no registration

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  • Justin Kreutzmann
  • Break On Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The Doors is a concert documentary from a 2016 all-star performance in Los Angeles that John Densmore and Robby Krieger, the two surviving members of The Doors, developed to celebrate what would have been Manzarek's 70th birthday. As well as the all star concert there's never before seen footage from The Doors archives and new Interviews from Densmore and Krieger. It's a one of a kind documentary about a very special person and a legendary rock band
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This is the music of all time, Bravo!👍☀🎼💐💫

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Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The door repair

The music of The Doors simply wouldnt be as vibrant and powerful were it not for the contributions of keyboardist Ray Manzarek. On Monday, the band announced a new documentary film, Break On Thru (A Celebration of Ray Manzarek) a doc that aims to celebrate the history and legacy of the Doors and Manzarek, with special focus given to the all-star tribute concert that took place at the Fonda Theatre in Hollywood in 2016. #THEDOORS: BREAK ON THRU – A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK comes to a cinema near you for 1 night only on Feb. 12! A hybrid concert/documentary, it includes conversations with @JimMorrison & Ray + new interviews with @JohnDensmore & Robby Krieger. Tickets: — The Doors ( TheDoors) December 9, 2019 Heres a quick teaser trailer: The film will screen in theaters for one night only on Feb. 12, 2020 in honor of Manzareks birthday. Visit the films official site for ticketing information. The 2016 Fonda Theatre concert featured guest appearances from the likes of Paul McCartney guitarist Brian Ray, Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins and multi-instrumentalist Rami Jaffee, Robert DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots, Exene and Jon Doe of X and many more, all coming together to pay their respects to the iconic Manzarek, alongside remaining Doors members John Densmore and Robbie Krieger. Rolling Stone adds that the Break On Thru film highlights the Doors classic music, interjecting behind-the-scenes interviews and footage in Manzareks memory. He passed away in 2013 after a battle with cancer. In related Doors news, a lavish 50th anniversary reissue of 1969s The Soft Parade was recently released — click here to pick up a copy.

Lookin' good, guys. ¯`♥´¯) ✰. ¸. ´✿¸.•*¨` •... ¸♥ ˙♥●•٠☮ﻬஐღ I saw Robby play in the early 90's @ a bar called Otto's, in Dekalb, Il. Sadly, I was unable to get his autograph. The two were joined by a couple of surprise guests filling in for the late Jim Morrison on vocals The two surviving members of the Doors gathered an eclectic group of friends and peers Thursday, for a special one-night-only reunion performance at a charity concert in Los Angeles. John Densmore and Robby Krieger were joined on stage by Nirvanas Krist Novoselic on bass for the first-ever “Homeward Bound” concert, a fundraising event for PATH (People Assisting the Read More … Next Thursday, January 23rd, the two surviving members of the Doors — drummer John Densmore and guitarist Robby Krieger — will make a rare appearance together at the Homeward Bound charity concert at the Wiltern in Los Angeles. Its been a couple of years since the pair last took the stage together, and one week out, Densmore admits to Rolling Stone that he and Krieger have yet to finalize a setlist — or even rehearse. [Read the entire article at Read More … FOURTH ANNUAL “DAY OF THE DOORS” TO TAKE PLACE AT THE ORIGINAL MORRISON HOTEL IN LOS ANGELES ON JANUARY 4, 2020 FAÇADE OF HOTEL TO BE RESTORED TO AN EXACT REPLICA OF THE ORIGINAL MORRISON HOTEL ALBUM COVER ROBBY KRIEGER TO PERFORM AND SPECIAL GUESTS TO BE ANNOUNCED Read more about The Day Of The Doors 2020 here! Robby Krieger and John Densmore are scheduled to perform a special acoustic performance at The Wiltern for Homeward Bound, alongside Jason Mraz, Fitz and the Tantrums, Phillip Phillips, and many others. For more information – head to the Homeward Bound Concert Website. The Doors have announced a new concert documentary to honor the legacy of late keyboardist Ray Manzarek. The Doors: Break on Thru – A Celebration of Ray Manzarek will premiere in theaters around the world in a one-night only event on February 12th, which would have been Manzareks birthday. Tickets can be found at  To read the entire Rolling Stone article – click here. Read the whole article at Rolling Stone. When the Doors producer, Paul A. Rothchild, suggested adding orchestral strings and horns to guitarist Robby Kriegers song “Touch Me, ” Krieger was not happy. It was two years after Sgt. Pepper, and he says he was wary of the band being seen as copycats. “I said, ‘Oh, God. Now were copying the Beatles, and the Stones had just done their version of the orchestra thing, ” he recalls. Read More … The Doors fourth studio album, The Soft Parade, became the bands fourth straight Top Ten album when it was released 50 years ago today on July 18, 1969. Despite featuring one of the groups biggest hits – “Touch Me” – it remains the most-polarizing record of The Doors career thanks to the brass and string arrangements that embellish several tracks. To commemorate the albums 50th year anniversary, Rhino reimagines The Read More … Rialto Pictures has restored Oliver Stones powerful music portrait “The Doors” in 4K Dolby Atmos, and is screening the release in select theaters through August 2019. Click here to check out the The Doors: The Final Cut at Rialto Pictures website! Recordings from The Doors first live concerts ever will be available on Black Vinyl for Record Store Day, April 2019. The limited-edition 10″ vinyl will be numbered. To find a participating store near you, please visit The final studio album by the Doors, originally released November 1978, is to be released as a 40th Anniversary edition (almost to the day) for Record Store Day Black Friday 2018. Seven years after Jim Morrison died, and five years after the remaining members of the band broke up, Ray Manzarek, Robby Krieger and John Densmore reunited and recorded backing tracks over Morrisons poetry (originally recorded in 1969-1970. This numbered, Read More … Post navigation.

Just in the West. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors 2016. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors 2017. One of the greatest bands ever, his solo in “Roadhouse Blues” is phenomenal. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The doors. What happened to rock n roll. Wednesday, February 12, 2020 THE DOORS: BREAK ON THRU – A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK Break On Thru  is a hybrid concert and documentary capturing a 2016 performance in Los Angeles, CA by surviving Doors members John Densmore and Robby Krieger to honor fellow Doors member Ray Manzarek on what would have been his birthday on February 12 th. The Doors were born when Ray Manzarek met Jim Morrison on Venice Beach in 1965. Ray became the beating heart of The Doors and the architect of their intoxicating keyboard sound. Manzareks evocative playing fused rock, jazz, blues, bossa nova and an array of other styles into something utterly, dazzlingly new.  The setlist from the concert consists of Doors songs performed by John and Robby alongside a cast of all-star guest musicians including Taylor Hawkins and Rami Jaffe (Foo Fighters) Robert DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilots) Stephen Perkins (Janes Addiction) Exene and John Doe (X) Warren Haynes (Govt Mule) Brian Ray (Paul McCartney) Andrew Watt and more. The film also includes rare archival footage of the band, conversations with Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, and esteemed music journalist Ben Fong-Torres, as well as new interviews with John and Robby. Not Rated.  103 minutes. Wednesday, February 12 at 7pm All Tickets: 12 IMPORTANT NOTE: The Doors: Break on Thru – A Celebration of Ray Manzarek   contains a sequence of flashing lights which might affect customers who are susceptible to photosensitive epilepsy. Personal Responsibility Statement: Proctors prides itself on offering a diverse selection of arts entertainment. Not all productions may appeal to or be appropriate for every person or for all ages. Patrons are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the shows we offer in order to make informed decisions prior to purchasing tickets. FREE PARKING in the Broadway parking garage is provided by Upstate Ford Dealers. WE ARE IN YOUR AREA.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors songs. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors tour. 0:39 that yeeaah. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and thedoors.

 

I love the first 30 enjoy life and etc. Most of these kids have no idea who these guys sad. 1975 , . Never change. Living legend. He's not even there I saw him in the Congo Back in 1979. I've always wondered if Jim had attempted to make any contact with any of The Doors members after he left for and was living in Paris. It is nice to know that he actually did call John Densmore to not only check up on how their new album LA Woman was doing but to go as far as to say that he does want to come back to California and play the new LA Woman songs with The Doors. Jim Morrison's time spent in Paris is surrounded in mystery. Many people wonder why he went there, what he did there, how he died there, did he fake his death there and did he have any intention about ever coming back to California and play with The Doors? This interview with Ray Manzarek does answer at least some of those questions.

I hear the ghost of Jim in Ray's singing and playing. Haunting. God bless. The guitar is too distorted in my opinion. And I prefer the nice old finger-picking Robby. Cinemark Terms & Conditions These Terms and Conditions govern use of the Cinemark website, the Cinemark mobile app and the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program. The Cinemark website and mobile app (together, the “Site”) is an online store where you can participate in the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program and purchase movie tickets, gift cards, Supersavers discounts, and certain merchandise provided by, or through, Cinemark USA, Inc. (“Cinemark, ” “us, ” “our, ” “we”) subject to your compliance with the Terms and Conditions set forth below. 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S. law or other applicable law and regulations (including federal, state and local laws and regulations and regulations of regulatory or administrative organizations) or otherwise engage in any illegal, manipulative or misleading activity through the use of the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; iv) Disable any licensing or control features of the Site; v) Introduce into the Site or into the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program any virus or other code or routine intended to disrupt the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, alter or delete its Content, access confidential Content on the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, retrieve or record information about the Site or its users, or interfere with the operation of the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, including, but not limited to, distribution of unsolicited advertising or mail messages and propagation of computer worms and viruses; vi) Merge the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program with another program or create derivative works based on the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; vii) Post any material in any form whatsoever on the Site or within the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program that is defamatory, obscene or otherwise unlawful or violates any third party's right of privacy or publicity; viii) Sublicense, assign, translate, rent, lease, lend, resell for profit, distribute or otherwise assign or transfer the content of or access to the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program to others; viii) Infringe any third party's patent, copyright, service mark, trademark or other intellectual property right of any kind or misappropriate the trade secrets of any third party in connection with your use of the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, or remove, obscure, or alter any notice of the copyright or other proprietary legends on the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; or (ix) Otherwise act in a fraudulent, illegal, malicious or negligent manner when using the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program. Except as expressly provided herein, Cinemark reserves all rights with respect to the Site and the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, and may pursue all legally available options under both civil and criminal laws (and may cooperate with law enforcement agencies) in the event of any violations. You recognize the great value of the goodwill associated with the Site and with the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program and acknowledge that the Site, the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program and all rights therein and goodwill pertaining thereto belong exclusively to Cinemark. You further agree that it is critical that such goodwill be protected and enhanced and, toward this end, you shall not during the term of your membership in the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program or thereafter: i) Attack the title or any rights of Cinemark in or to the copyrights, trademark, and other intellectual property in the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; ii) Do anything either by an act of omission or commission which might impair, violate or infringe the copyright, trademarks, and other intellectual property in the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; iii) Claim (adversely to Cinemark or anyone claiming rights through Cinemark) any right, title or interest in or to the copyright, trademarks, and other intellectual property in the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program; iv) Misuse or harm the copyright, trademarks, and other intellectual property in the Site or Movie Rewards or bring the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program into disrepute; v) For its benefit, directly or indirectly, register or apply for registration of Cinemarks trademarks or any mark which is, in Cinemarks reasonable opinion, the same as or confusingly similar to any of Cinemarks trademarks; and/or (vi) For its benefit, directly or indirectly, register, maintain or apply for registration of a domain name which is, in Cinemarks reasonable opinion, the same as, confusingly similar to or incorporates any of the Cinemarks trademarks. 4. 6 Copyright; Trademarks:  Cinemark, or the applicable third party owner, retains all right, title and interest to and under all patents (including all reissues, divisions, continuations and extensions of such patents) patent applications, trademarks, trademark registrations service marks, trademark registration applications, trade names, domain names, all other names and slogans embodying business, product or service goodwill, copyrights, computer software, specifications, data, designs, trade secrets, technology, diagnostic tools, inventions, know-how, processes and confidential and proprietary information and any other intellectual property or other right, in all information and content (including all text, data, graphics, and logos) on the Site and the Movie Rewards Page. Except as provided in these Terms and Conditions, you are strictly prohibited from modifying, copying, transmitting, distributing displaying, performing, reproducing, publishing, licensing, framing, creating derivative works from, transferring or otherwise using in any other way for commercial or public purposes, in whole or in part, any information, text graphics, images, video clips, directors, databases, listing or software obtained from the Site or the Movie Rewards Page without the prior written consent of Cinemark. Systematic retrieval of content from the Site or the Movie Rewards Page to create or compile, directly or indirectly, a collection, compilation, database or directory (whether through robots, spiders, automatic devices or manual processes) or creating links to the Site or the Movie Rewards Page without written permission from Cinemark is strictly prohibited. Nothing on the Site or the Movie Rewards Page shall be interpreted as granting, by implication, estoppel, or otherwise, any license or right to use any image, trademark, logo or service mark on the Site or the Movie Rewards Page. Unless otherwise specified, the Site and the Movie Rewards Page are for your personal and non-commercial use only and you may print, copy and download any information or portion of the Site or the Movie Rewards Page for your personal use only. Copying or downloading material from the Site or the Movie Rewards Page does not transfer title to any material on the Site or the Movie Rewards Page to you. If you copy or download any information or software from the Site or the Movie Rewards Page, you agree that you will not remove or obscure any copyright or other notices or legends contained in any such information. You are prohibited from using any marks for any purpose, including, but not limited to, use in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of materials on the Site or use as metatags on other pages or sites on the World Wide Web without the written permission of Cinemark or such third party, which may own the marks. You are not authorized to use our logo as a hyperlink to the Site unless you obtain Cinemarks written permission in advance, although we permit you to use our logo as a hyperlink to certain designated features of the Site for designated purposes. You agree to grant Cinemark an irrevocable, non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free, sublicensable, transferable license to use, copy, display, distribute, perform, transmit, publish, broadcast, and prepare derivative works upon, anything transmitted to the Site or the Movie Rewards Page by you. Cinemark reserves all rights to copyright and trademark ownership of its material at the Movie Rewards Page and will enforce such rights to the full extent of the law. 4. 7 Social Media Features:  The Site, including the Movie Rewards Page, may provide certain social media features that enable you to: Link certain content on the Site to certain third-party websites. Send emails or other communications with certain content, or links to certain content, on the Site. Cause limited portions of content on the site to be displayed or appear to be displayed on your own or certain third-party websites. You may use these features solely as they are provided by us, solely with respect to the content they are displayed with, and otherwise in accordance with any additional terms and conditions we may provide with respect to such features. You agree to cooperate with us in causing any unauthorized framing or linking to cease immediately. We reserve the right to withdraw without notice any linking permission. We may disable all or any social media features and any links at any time, without notice, in our discretion. 4. 8 Privacy; Collection and Use of Certain Information:  These Terms and Conditions incorporate our  Privacy Policy. 4. 9 Passwords:  When this Agreement has been accepted and agreed to by you, the password that you create will soon be activated and enable you to access your Account. Passwords may not be shared or used by more than one individual. Any transfer of passwords to, or use of passwords by, an unauthorized person is strictly prohibited. You will maintain the confidentiality of the User IDs and passwords by which you access the Site, and will allow access to the Site and the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program only by authorized persons, and not by any program, expert system, electronic agent, bot" or other automated means. You acknowledge that neither Cinemark nor any third party will contact you to solicit your User ID, or password. Therefore, you should not provide your User ID or password to any person whom you do not authorize to use your Account. Any use of your assigned user IDs or passwords will be deemed to be your use. Remember to choose a strong password, including numbers, capital letters, special characters, etc., and one that is not typically found in a dictionary. You may never use someone elses account, username or password without permission. When creating your Account, you must provide accurate and complete information. In the event your password is lost or stolen it is your responsibility to notify Cinemark as provided in the  Contact Us  section.  YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR MAINTAINING THE CONFIDENTIALITY OF YOUR PASSWORD AND ACCOUNT, AND YOU AGREE THAT YOU ARE FULLY RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL ACTIVITIES THAT OCCUR UNDER YOUR PASSWORD OR ACCOUNT, AND THAT CINEMARK HAS NO LIABILITY FOR ANY ACTIVITIES THAT OCCUR UNDER YOUR PASSWORD OR ACCOUNT. If you become aware of any breach of security through your Account, you must immediately change your password and notify us of such breach. You agree that, unless you have first notified us immediately of any such breach, we should assume that any instruction transmitted using your User ID and password is yours and has been authorized by you, and we will have no obligation to inquire into the propriety of such instruction. You will not permit any use of the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program that would damage, interfere with or unreasonably overload the Site and/or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program. 4. 10 Exclusions and Limitations; Consumer Protection Notice:   If you are a consumer, the provisions in this Agreement are intended to be only as broad and inclusive as is permitted by the laws of your State of residence.  If you are a New Jersey consumer, the terms of the provisions relating to third-party links herein do not limit or waive your rights as a consumer under New Jersey law and the provisions in these Terms and Conditions are intended to be only as broad and inclusive as is permitted by the laws of the State of New Jersey.  In any event, Cinemark reserves all rights, defenses and permissible limitations under the law of your State of residence. 4. 11 Shipping of Rewards and Site Purchases:  Cinemark (or its vendor) will only ship to addresses located in the United States. We do not ship to P. O. Boxes. When you redeem the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program points for physical rewards, or make purchases on the Site for gift cards, Supersavers, or merchandise, you must provide a valid mailing address for shipment. It is your obligation to provide full shipping information at the time of redemption of points for or purchase of a physical item in order to receive the item.  Failure to do so may result in the loss of the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program points and/or the physical Reward for which the points were redeemed. Cinemark will not use the address provided for any marketing purposes. 4. 12 Payments and Refunds of Site Purchases:  In using the Site, you agree to pay the amounts owed to Cinemark via Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express credit cards only.  At this time, we are not accepting any other method of payment. If you purchase tickets on the Site with a registered account you can receive a refund at for the purchase price of the ticket (excluding any service charge) up to two hours prior to the start of the showtime. In the rare situations when a show is cancelled, you will be entitled to a refund for the full purchase price of your tickets, including any service charges. At the theatre, a full refund can be given up to the start time of the showtime.  In these situations please notify our guest services department at Contact Us  and include the theatre, movie, showtime, email address and your confirmation number. Please refer to the  FAQ page  at for further details regarding the refund procedures. 4. 13 Links:  Although Cinemark controls a few hyperlinks in the Site, some links within the Site may lead to third-party sites. In addition, some Rewards can be claimed through links provided by movie studios or other third parties, which links Cinemark may pass through to you.  Cinemark includes these third-party links solely as a convenience to you. The presence of a link does not imply an endorsement of the linked site, its operator, or its contents, or that Cinemark is in any way affiliated with the linked site. The Site does not incorporate any materials appearing in such linked sites by reference. Cinemark reserves the right to terminate a link to a third party web site at any time. The third party sites are not controlled by Cinemark, and may have different terms of use and privacy policies, which Cinemark encourages you to review. Cinemark has no responsibility for the content of any third party web site, and provides such links on an “AS IS” basis. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL CINEMARK BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT OR INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES THAT MAY ARISE FROM YOUR USE OF, OR INABILITY TO USE, ANY THIRD PARTY SITE. 4. 14 Must be At Least 13 Years Old to Use the Site and at Least 16 Years Old to be a Movie Fan and Movie Club Member:  If you are at least thirteen (13) years old but not of legal age to enter agreements, you MUST have permission from your parent or guardian to use the Site and to become a member of either Movie Fan or Movie Club. Cinemark makes no active effort to collect personal information from individuals under the age of 13. You must ensure that content you provide on any website or social media platform in connection with attempting to earn the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program points is acceptable for viewing by users who might not be adults. 4. 15 Controlled from the United States:  The Site and the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program are controlled from offices within the United States. Cinemark makes no representation that content or materials in the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program are appropriate or available for use in other jurisdictions. Access to the Site, the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, content, or materials from jurisdictions where such access is illegal is strictly prohibited. If you choose to access the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program from other jurisdictions, you do so at your own risk. You are always responsible for your compliance with applicable laws. THE LAWS OF TEXAS WILL GOVERN THE CONTENT AND MATERIALS CONTAINED IN THE SITE AND the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, WITHOUT GIVING EFFECT TO ANY PRINCIPLES OF CONFLICTS OF LAWS AND EXCLUDING THE UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION ON THE INTERNATIONAL SALE OF GOODS. YOU AGREE TO SUBMIT TO THE EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF THE STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS OF DALLAS, TEXAS IN RELATION TO ANY CLAIM, DISPUTE, OR DIFFERENCE ARISING FROM THESE TERMS, AND YOU AGREE TO WAIVE ANY RIGHT OF REMOVAL OR TRANSFER WHETHER DUE TO FORUM NON CONVENIENS OR OTHER REASON. 4. 16 Not Authorized to do Business in Every Jurisdiction:  Cinemark is not authorized to do business in every jurisdiction. Information published on the Site or the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program may contain references or cross-references to goods or services that are not available in your state or country. If you click on our International link, you can see the countries where Cinemark currently does business. There is a separate Cinemark web site for each country, which is subject to its own terms and conditions and privacy policy. 4. 17 English Language:  The official text of these Terms and Conditions or any notice provided hereunder shall be in English. In the event of any dispute concerning the construction or meaning of these Terms and Conditions, reference shall be made only to these Terms and Conditions as written in English and not in any translation into another language. 4. 18 Arbitration:  Except as prohibited by law, unless we otherwise elect, any dispute regarding these Terms and Conditions, including validity, existence, binding effect, interpretation, performance, breach or termination, and including tort claims, shall be referred to and finally determined, to the exclusion of the courts, by a single arbitrator. Disputes shall be resolved by final and binding arbitration in accordance with the JAMS Inc. Comprehensive Arbitration Rules & Procedures then in effect. There shall be no right or authority for any claims to be arbitrated on a class action basis. The arbitration shall take place in Dallas, Texas, in English or at the option of the party seeking relief, online, by telephone, online, or via written submissions alone, and be administered by JAMS.  The arbitral tribunal (“Tribunal”) shall be composed of one arbitrator, who shall be independent and impartial.  If the parties fail to agree on the arbitrator within twenty (20) calendar days after the initiation of an arbitration hereunder, JAMS shall appoint the arbitrator in accordance with the rules. The decision of the arbitrator will be final and binding on the parties.  Judgment on any award(s) rendered by the arbitrator may be entered in any court having jurisdiction thereof.  Nothing in this Section shall prevent either party from seeking immediate injunctive relief from any court of competent jurisdiction, and any such request shall not be deemed incompatible with the agreement to arbitrate or a waiver of the right to arbitrate. The parties undertake to keep confidential all awards in their arbitration, together with all confidential information, all materials in the proceedings created for the purpose of the arbitration and all other documents produced by the other party in the proceedings and not otherwise in the public domain, save and to the extent that disclosure may be required of a party by legal duty, to protect or pursue a legal right or to enforce or challenge an award in legal proceedings before a court or other judicial authority. The arbitrator shall award all fees and expenses, including reasonable attorneys fees, to the prevailing party.  Any judgment rendered by the arbitrator may be entered in any court of competent jurisdiction. Members may choose to opt out of the agreement to arbitrate by mailing a written opt out notice (“Notice”) to Cinemark. The Notice must be postmarked no later than thirty (30) days after the date you accept these Terms and Conditions for the first time. The Notice must be mailed to Cinemark Corporate Headquarters located at 3900 Dallas Parkway, Plano, Texas 75093 to the attention of the Legal Department. This procedure is the only mechanism by which you can opt out of the agreement to arbitrate. Opting out of the agreement to arbitrate has no effect on any other parts of these Terms and Conditions, or any previous or future arbitration agreements that you have entered into with Cinemark. 4. 19 Entire Agreement; Severability:  These Terms and Conditions and the Privacy Policy, which is hereby incorporated into this Agreement by reference, constitute the entire agreement between you and us regarding your use of the Site, your participation in the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, your entitlement to collect and redeem points, and your entitlement to Rewards and any other benefits of the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, and supersede all previous versions or prior agreements oral or written, and any other communications relating to the subject matter of this Agreement. Except as expressly contained in these Terms and Conditions, there are no conditions, representations, warranties, express or implied, statutory or otherwise. When you deal with us over the Internet, you consent to the formation of contractual relations through electronic communications. We are the final authority as to the interpretation of these Terms and Conditions and as to any other questions or disputes regarding the Site, the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program or any Reward. All materials and any notices from us will be sent to your address as in our records; please notify us if your address changes. The Site, the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program, all rules and Terms and Conditions are governed by the laws of Texas. If any provision of these Terms and Conditions is invalid or unenforceable, such provision shall not affect the validity and enforceability of the remaining Terms and Conditions. Use of Movie Club 5. 1 Program Overview.  Enrollment in the Movie Club program is on the basis of a monthly membership fee (“Membership Fee”) as stated on our Movie Rewards page.  An active Movie Club member (“Movie Club Member”) will receive one credit (“Credit”) per month valid for one regular 2D movie ticket.  Additionally, Movie Club Members will also receive special members-only discounts on concessions at participating theaters. When you enroll in Movie Club you will receive a monthly credit redeemable for one (1) regular 2D movie ticket at participating Cinemark theatres (and except in certain Cinemark theatres where an upcharge may be added) and will be able to access members-only pricing on tickets and concessions. Movie Club Members are automatically enrolled in the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program. As such, Movie Club Members are subject to the Terms and Conditions set forth in Sections 3 and 4 above. In addition, the following Terms and Conditions apply.  If there is a conflict between any terms in Sections 3 and 4 and this Section 5, the terms of this Section 5 shall control. 5. 2 Enrollment, Renewal, and Cancellation.  Purchase is required for enrollment in Movie Club.   Movie Club Members must be enrolled in the Cinemark Movie Rewards Program (however, enrollment in Movie Fan does not require enrollment in Movie Club and there is no purchase required for enrollment as a Movie Fan member.   The Membership Fee may vary based on zip code and may or may not include applicable taxes.  The Membership Fee and terms of enrollment will not be changed during the course of the membership month.  However, Cinemark reserves the right to change the Membership Fee and terms of enrollment at the time of monthly renewal.  If the Membership Fee and terms of enrollment are changed, Cinemark will send an e-mail notification to Movie Club Members prior to renewal with instructions for termination of the Movie Club account (“Movie Club Account”. Renewal of the Movie Club membership is automatic.  Cinemark will charge the credit card on record for the Membership Fee, typically on the 30 th  day of the billing cycle for automatic renewal.   Unless the Membership Fee has changed, Cinemark will not send any e-mail notification prior to charging the credit card for a renewal.  The exact date for the next monthly billing will be displayed in the profile page of the Movie Club Account. The Subscription Member is responsible for keeping the credit card information updated on the Movie Club Account.  If the credit card on record cannot be charged, the Movie Club Account will be cancelled and Cinemark will send an e-mail to the Subscription Member notifying the cancellation of the Movie Club Account effective as of the date of renewal. A Movie Club Account is active and available for use immediately upon receipt of the confirmation email acknowledging creation of a Movie Club Account.  Enrollment is limited to one Movie Club Account per Movie Club Member per email address.  Cinemark requires that Movie Club Members be at least sixteen (16) years of age. There is no required minimum enrollment period. Movie Club Members may cancel membership at any time through the profile management page. The cancellation will be effective from the billing cycle following the effective date of cancellation.  The Membership Fee cannot be refunded.   All unused Credits remaining in the Movie Club Account expire six (6) months from the date of cancellation. 5. 3 Use of Credits.  Movie Club Members will receive one (1) Credit valid for one (1) regular 2D movie ticket during each month of membership.  Except in certain theatres where an upcharge may be added, each Credit may be redeemed for one (1) regular 2D movie ticket or the Membership Fee paid for the Credit, whichever is higher.  The Credit can be used to book tickets at any participating Cinemark theatre.  Credits may be redeemed only for regular 2D tickets; upcharges will apply for any non-2D or premium format tickets. Unused credits (“Rollover Credits”) rollover into the following month. Rollover Credits continue to rollover and may be used indefinitely in an active Movie Club Account.  If a Movie Club Account is cancelled, all Rollover Credits expire six (6) months from the date of cancellation. Credits may not be partially used; the entire Credit is to be used on booking one ticket.  Tickets booked with a Credit are transferrable and may be used by anyone. However, Credits may not be transferred and are only redeemable by the Movie Club Member who received the Credit in his/her Movie Club Account. A Movie Club Member can use any number of available Credits in a single transaction.  All outstanding Credits must be used prior to receiving the Membership Fee price on additional tickets.  However, the number of transactions on a Movie Club Account is limited to three (3) per day.  All tickets purchased after the third transaction will be at the non-discounted price but service fees will be waived for all transactions.  There are no limitations on number of transactions for the concessions discount. If Credits are used to purchase tickets but the Member is unable to make the showtime, we will refund the Credit(s) not cash value) to the Members Movie Club Account. The Member is not entitled to receive the cash value of any refunded tickets. A Credit is not a Gift Card and is not redeemable for cash; it may not be used for any transaction except the booking of one (1) regular 2D movie ticket. Credits cannot be refunded. However, tickets booked using the Credit may be exchanged for a new ticket. 5. 4 Member Discount; Purchase Process.  Subscription Members will receive a 20% discount towards the purchase of all concessions, except on alcoholic beverages, dairy, etc. wherever prohibited by state law. One companion ticket can be purchased at the then current Membership Fee price for each transaction in which a Credit is applied (regardless of how many Credits are applied in the transaction.   If a Credit is not available to be applied (i. e., after all Credits have been exhausted) a Member may purchase two tickets at the then current Membership Fee price per transaction. Members must present their User ID, or a print-out or email associated with their Movie Club Account to book a ticket at the point of sale.  Members may book tickets online and will receive a confirmation number as with an ordinary purchase. Tickets booked using a Credit or member discount cannot be purchased at a Kiosk. No online fees or service fees are applied to transactions booked through an active Movie Club Account.  Cinemark reserves the right to require customers to present an alternate form of identification, such as a valid photo ID, while booking a ticket at the box office with their Movie Club Account, if they cannot present a valid User ID. Please refer to the  FAQ page  at for further details regarding the Movie Club program. Contact Us: For further information, or inquiries about the Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy, please contact our guest services department at Contact Us. Cinemark Corporate Office: Cinemark USA, Inc. 3900 Dallas Parkway Plano, TX 75093-7865 Telephone: 1-800-246-3627.

Total legend! love the Q&A.

Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The doorstep

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors song.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors book

Coolest story bruh. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors video. Two Amazing legends on stage once again. The Doors: Break On Thru - A Celebration Of Ray Manzare Neu 103min FSK noch nicht bekannt Konzert FSK: Keine Kennzeichnung Bei einer Altersfreigabe für Kinofilme muss nach § 14 Abs. 3 Jugendschutzgesetz (JuSchG) auch bei einer Freigabe "ab 18 Jahren" auf eine "schwere Jugendgefährdung" hin geprüft werden. Hintergrund der gesetzlichen Bestimmungen ist, dass in Einzelfällen auch Jugendliche Zutritt zu den Vorstellungen erhalten könnten. Bei einer Freigabe von Filmen auf DVD, Blu-ray oder vergleichbaren Bildträgern besteht verstärkt die Gefahr, dass bereits Jugendliche Filme sehen, die erst "ab 18 Jahren" freigegeben sind. Hier reicht daher bereits eine "einfache Jugendgefährdung" aus, damit keine Kennzeichnung ausgesprochen werden darf. Es ist daher möglich, dass ein Film, der im Kino eine Freigabe "ab 18 Jahren" erhalten hat, in der gleichen Version für eine Veröffentlichung auf DVD keine Freigabe erhält. Beschreibung Capturing a 2016 all-star tribute concert for co-founder and keyboardist of The Doors, the film features captivating musical performances alongside rare archival footage of the band. THE DOORS: BREAK ON THRU - A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK is a hybrid live concert and documentary capturing a 2016 tribute performance in Los Angeles, CA by surviving Doors members John Densmore and Robby Krieger to honor fellow Doors member Ray Manzarek on what would have been his birthday. The setlist consists of Doors songs performed by John and Robby alongside a cast of all-star guest musicians including various members of the Foo Fighters, X, Stone Temple Pilots, Jane's Addiction, Paul McCartney's Band, Gov't Mule and more. The film also includes rare archival footage of the band, conversations with Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, and esteemed music journalist Ben Fong-Torres, as well as new interviews with John and Robby. Regie Justin Kruetzmann Darsteller Robby Krieger, John Densmore, Taylor Hawkins, Rami Jaffe, Robert DeLeo, Stephen Perkins, John Doe, Exene Cervenka, Warren Haynes Land USA The Doors: Break On Thru - A Celebration Of Ray Manzarek Beschreibung: Regie: Justin Kruetzmann Darsteller: Robby Krieger, John Densmore, Taylor Hawkins, Rami Jaffe, Robert DeLeo, Stephen Perkins, John Doe, Exene Cervenka, Warren Haynes Land: USA.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors 2. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors images. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors lyrics. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors chords. Good on Morrison. I looked for this drum sequence for years. Is there anything more interesting than hearing from the creator of a classic how the whole thing was formed. The Doors announced the premiere of a documentary tribute to late keyboardist Ray Manzarek, which will be screened in theaters across the world on Feb. 12 – the date of his birth. Break on Thru – A Celebration of Ray Manzarek is described as a “hybrid concert and documentary” featuring scenes shot at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles in 2016 – the first time surviving Doors Robby Krieger and John Densmore had appeared onstage together in 15 years. Taylor Hawkins of the Foo Fighters, Robert DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots, Warren Haynes and Ozzy Osbourne producer Andrew Watt are also featured. You can watch a brief trailer for the movie below. “The Doors were born when Ray Manzarek met Jim Morrison on Venice Beach in 1965, ” distributors Trafalgar Releasing said in a statement. “Ray became the beating heart of the Doors and the architect of their intoxicating keyboard sound. Manzareks evocative playing fused rock, jazz, blues, bossa nova and an array of other styles into something utterly, dazzlingly new. The set list from the concert consists of Doors songs performed by John and Robby alongside a cast of all-star guest musicians. The film also includes rare footage of the band, including archival interviews with Manzarek and Morrison, plus new conversations with Densmore and Krieger. Manzarek died in May 2013 at 74, following a battle with cancer. "I'm just glad to have been able to have played Doors songs with him for the last decade. Krieger said at the time. "Ray was a huge part of my life and I will always miss him. Tickets for the documentary screening are available now at the movie's website.

Break on thru celebration of ray manzarek and the doors. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors photos

Wow good stuff. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors album. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors band. But Jim always loved making a spectacle out of things. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The door locks. JIM MORRISON IS # 1 & THE DOORS RULE. 👍. Break on thru a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors.

If I can even play, 1/1000th of what they are able to do now, in my prime. I will consider myself to be blessed. Real musicians. They inspire me so much. RIP Ray Manzarek, RIP Jim. So good to see Robby going strong and still performing. LEGENDS. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors reviews. I wasnt apart of the 60s era it looks like a easier time frame. . 1965 wurde die Band in Amerika gegründet. Jim Morrisons unnachahmlich düster-romantischer Gesang und das prägnante Orgel- und Klavierspiel von Ray Manzarek, das den Basssisten überflüssig machte, sorgten für eine ganz eigenen Sound. Capturing a 2016 all-star tribute concert for co-founder and keyboardist of The Doors, the film features captivating musical performances alongside rare archival footage of the band. THE DOORS: BREAK ON THRU - A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK is a hybrid live concert and documentary capturing a 2016 tribute performance in Los Angeles, CA by surviving Doors members John Densmore and Robby Krieger to honor fellow Doors member Ray Manzarek on what would have been his birthday. The setlist consists of Doors songs performed by John and Robby alongside a cast of all-star guest musicians including various members of the Foo Fighters, X, Stone Temple Pilots, Jane's Addiction, Paul McCartney's Band, Gov't Mule and more. The film also includes rare archival footage of the band, conversations with Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, and esteemed music journalist Ben Fong-Torres, as well as new interviews with John and Robby.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors pictures. Drafthouse News. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors youtube. RIP ray,and Jim,and thank you for the soundtracks that changed my life forever. Krieger! Yes. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The door cinema club. Released 1 hr 7 min Documentary Tell us where you are Looking for movie tickets? Enter your location to see which movie theaters are playing Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The Doors near you. ENTER CITY, STATE OR ZIP CODE GO Sign up for a FANALERT and be the first to know when tickets and other exclusives are available in your area. Also sign me up for FanMail to get updates on all things movies: tickets, special offers, screenings + more. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The Doors Synopsis An all-star performance in Los Angeles that John Densmore and Robby Krieger developed. Read Full Synopsis Movie Reviews Presented by Rotten Tomatoes.

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors for sale

 

Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors full. The Doors and Trafalgar Releasing have announced the upcoming release of The Doors: Break on Thru - A Celebration of Ray Manzarek, coming to cinemas worldwide for a one-night-only event on Feb. 12. The film will bring fans together in theaters to celebrate the extraordinary legacy of the late Ray Manzarek, co-founder and keyboardist of The Doors, on what would have been his birthday. This critically acclaimed, all-star hybrid concert-documentary was filmed at the Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles, CA and brought surviving members from The Doors, Robby Krieger and John Densmore, on stage for the first time in 15 years to celebrate the birthday of Manzarek alongside captivating performances from Foo Fighters Taylor Hawkins and Rami Jaffee, Stone Temple Pilots Robert DeLeo, Paul McCartney s Brian Ray, Xs Exene and John Doe, Janes Addiction s Stephen Perkins, Govt Mule s Warren Haynes and more. STARRING ROBBY KRIEGER (THE DOORS. JOHN DENSMORE (THE DOORS) TAYLOR HAWKINS (FOO FIGHTERS. RAMI JAFFEE (FOO FIGHTERS) ROBERT DELEO (STONE TEMPLE PILOTS. STEPHEN PERKINS (JANES ADDICTION) JOHN DOE (X. EXENE CERVENKA (X. WARREN HAYNES (GOVT MULE) FEATURING BRIAN RAY (PAUL MCCARTNEY BAND. EMILY ARMSTRONG (DEAD SARA) NASRI (MAGIC. ANDREW WATT * WAYLON KRIEGER * JIM MANCZAREK * PHIL CHEN * NATHAN WILMARTH * PABLO MANZAREK * BEN FONG-TORRES With a setlist of Doors classics and compelling behind the scenes interviews and footage, this film celebrates the longevity of The Doors, bringing multiple generations together to celebrate this iconic band. Proceeds from the LA concert were donated to Stand Up for Cancer as selected by Ray Manzarek. Participating theaters and tickets can be found at. John Densmore, drummer of The Doors, shared: It was such an honor to play with these world-class musicians in a tribute to our magical keyboard player. " Kymberli Frueh, SVP Programming & Content Acquisitions at Trafalgar Releasing has said on the news: “ Break On Thru is a true celebration of Doors co-founder Ray Manzarek and includes a whole host of musicians inspired by him including Taylor Hawkins of the Foo Fighters and Robert DeLeo from Stone Temple Pilots. Trafalgar Releasing is pleased to present the first-ever global fan cinema gathering sanctioned by The Doors to celebrate Manzareks incredible legacy. ” 2019 has been strong for music releases from Trafalgar Releasing in cinema. Coming up next is GORILLAZ: REJECT FALSE ICONS. Recent successes have included  Depeche Mode: SPIRITS in the Fores t directed by Anton Corbijn,  Shakira in Concert: El Dorado World Tour,  Metallica and San Francisco Symphony: S&M², which became the biggest ever rock music event in cinemas globally,  BRING THE SOUL: THE MOVIE, which became the single largest event cinema release globally, Grateful Deads 9th Annual Meet-Up at the Movies, Tribeca documentary  Between Me and My Mind  about Phish frontman Trey Anastasio,  Roger Waters Us + Them, Slayer: The Repentless Killogy, Rush Cinema Strangiato 2019  and  The Cure: Anniversary 1978-2018 Live in Hyde Park London. The London based outfit has previously released films including Coldplay: A Head Full of Dreams, The Music Center presents Joni 75: A Birthday Celebration, Khalid Free Spirit, One More Time with Feeling, among others. The Doors: Break on Thru - A Celebration of Ray Manzarek will be screened in cinemas around the world on Feb. Tickets are on sale now at, where fans can find the most up-to-date information regarding participating theaters. Evergreen, a student movie produced by Ray Manzarek, and Five Situations, a film for which fellow UCLA classmate Jim Morrison did sound, are now in the process of being restored from the Ray Manzarek & Jim Morrison Preservation Project. Funding is in process, which will allow the UCLA Film and Television Archive to clean the films and transfer them from fragile 16-mm prints to high-resolution digital cinema packages. Once this has been done, the films are scheduled to be screened in Westwood, CA at the Billy Wilder Theater at the Hammer Museum at UCLA, along with a collection of other student films made by notable alumni, as part of the UCLAs upcoming year-long 100th-anniversary celebrations. “Ray would have been pleased and flattered of course, ” said Dorothy Fujikawa in a 2019 UCLA media statement. Fujikawa, who was married to Manzarek from 1967 until his death in 2013, had a leading role in Evergreen. I saw The Doors perform at the Forum in Inglewood, CA in 1968, and first met Ray Manzarek in 1974 at Mercury Records on Hollywood Boulevard. I interviewed Ray a dozen times over forty years and produced a handful of recording sessions with him. Im one of the fortunate eight people listed in the dedication in his autobiography, Light My Fire. Ray was also interviewed in my 2004 book This Is Rebel Music. During 1996, I co-produced and curated a Rock Literature music series at the MET Theatre in Hollywood and all three surviving Doors performed one evening. Manzarek also penned the introduction to my 2009 coffee table book, Canyon of Dreams: The Magic and the Music of Laurel Canyon. He graciously joined me for two book signing events in Oakland and San Francisco. In 2011, Ray, Doors engineer-producer, Bruce Botnick, Elliot Lefko of the AEG/Golden Voice company and I were the featured panel discussion in the second annual Pollstar Live! Conference, The Doors—An L. A. Legacy, held at the Marriot at L. Live in Los Angeles. My 2014 book Turn Up The Radio! Rock, Pop and Roll in Los Angeles 1956-1972, carries a dedication to Ray. Raymond Daniel Manzarek (born Raymond Daniel Manczarek) was born Feb. 12, 1939, in Chicago, IL. Ray resided with his family on the Southside of Chicago and graduated from DePaul University with a B. in Economics. "I was trained classically and I think it opened up a lot of avenues for the rock element to enter. Rock & roll to me is just like jazz. Its an improvisational medium. I left classical music because it didnt allow me to improvise. I didnt feel that I wanted to subjugate myself to another mans thoughts. I loved the technical training though, and theres nothing like it. I love the act of making my fingers move over the organ and piano. Manzarek stressed to me in a 1974 interview in the now-defunct Melody Maker. In the early 1960s, the Manzarek clan relocated to the South Bay community of Redondo Beach in Southern California. Ray also fronted a band, Rick and The Ravens, and was exposed to '50s and 60s jazz records, as well as the sounds emanating from the seminal World Pacific Records label. It was in Westwood, CA, at the UCLA School of Film in 1964-1965 where Manzarek first encountered James Douglas Morrison and then earned an M. degree in Cinematography. In 1965, Ray fronted Rick and The Ravens, and that same year joined up again with Morrison on the beach in Venice. The singer's poetry was a perfect fit for the classically trained keyboardist's musical ideas, and eventually they decided to form a band, taking the groups name from Aldous Huxleys infamous psychedelic memoir, T he Doors of Perception. They soon teamed with drummer John Densmore and guitarist Robby Krieger formerly in the band Psychedelic Rangers. The Doors actively toured and recorded together until 1971. Producer Paul A. Rothchild and engineer-producer Bruce Botnick for Elektra Records created seismic studio albums and oversaw live recordings that issued that changed the course of popular music. Ray Manzarek directed three long-form films on the Doors. The Doors: Live At the Hollywood Bowl; The Doors: Dance On Fire; and The Doors: The Soft Parade. Manzarek produced and performed on five albums by the L. band X, including Los Angeles. He continued to record, produce albums and write. Manzarek authored The Poet in Exile, as well as his autobiography, Light My Fire: My Life With The Doors, and most recently penned a second novel, Snake Moon (Night Shade Books) which is a Civil War-era ghost story. He released a new CD, Atonal Head (PBM Records) his endeavor into electronica, which he describes as "jazz-based with computer additives. done in collaboration with Polish expatriate jazz musician Bal. Theres also a rendition of "Riders on the Storm. with guest vocal by Jim Morrison. As we approach his February birthday celebration, Ive curated this interview below culled from a series of dialogues we had from 1974-2013. Q: Talk to me about your early encounters with Jim Morrison and especially his singing voice. I walked with you on Venice Beach last decade and you pointed at the sand and said, ‘This is where Jim sang to me in a Chet Baker-like voice. His voice had a softness to it. Morrison got louder and better as a singer during the entire Doors recording process. A: When I first heard Jim sing in Venice I thought he had it. There was no doubt that he would not have any problems ‘cause the microphone is no problem. Pitch is the problem with a singer. Can you sing in the same key on pitch? And I worked with a lot of singers who cant do that. Finding the notes. But Morrison had a good sense of pitch. So, if it was in the key of G, he would sing ‘Moonlight Drive in the key of G. And he would be there right on pitch. That was the important thing. The rest of it was all acquired expertise in your practice of your instrument. “Interestingly, on ‘Moonlight Drive is that its a really a seminal, or a signpost song. Its the first song Jim Morrison sang to me on the beach. It had been after we graduated UCLA and I ran into him on the beach. ‘What have you been doing? ‘Ive been writing songs. ‘Sing me a song. ‘Im shy. ‘Youre not shy. Stop it. Theres nobody here. Just you and me. Im not judging your voice. I just want to hear the song. Besides, you used to sing with Rick and The Ravens at the Turkey Joint West and did ‘Louie Louie until you could not talk. " Q: How was Morrison on stage even then? I know later he went straight into a garage rehearsal room with you and the boys. Was he a natural even in jams at the Turkey Joint West venue? A: No. (laughs. It took a while and later to work it out on stage at The London Fog and Whisky A Go-Go. But by God, he sure did scream a lot and sure had a willing injection of energy into rock & roll. Q: Lets discuss the epic debut LP The Doors. It was done at Sunset Sound with producer Paul A. Rothchild and engineer Bruce Botnick. A: Sunset Sound was a very hip recording studio on Sunset Blvd. The Beach Boys had been there. Herb Alpert, Love. It was owned by a trumpet player, Salvador) Tutti Camarata and he had the Camarata Strings, I believe. "It was an excellent recording studio, four tracks. Rothchild and Botnick. Never had met Bruce before. Paul was the producer. “Rothchild and Botnick are Door number 5 and Door number 6. Theres four Doors in the band and two Doors in the control room. So, they were always there, always twisting the knobs and really on top of it. A couple of high IQ very intelligent guys. We couldnt have done it without them. “Paul Rothchild was the guy who had produced The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and also Love, along with Botnick. The two of them did those albums together. So, Robby was a big fan of the Butterfield Blues Band and he was very excited that Paul Rothchild was gonna produce for us. I didnt know either one of them and not familiar with their work outside of Love. I had heard Paul Butterfield and thought it was good. Chicago blues by Chicago white boys. Being a Chicago white boy myself I could identify with Chicago white boys playing the blues. So it was a great combination of six guys. That first album was basically the four Doors and the two other Doors in the control room making the sound. We made the music. They made the sound. And they did an absolutely brilliant job. And it was a real joy and a great learning experience. “I had been in a fabulous recording studio before at World Pacific on 3 rd Street in LA with Rick and The Ravens for Dick Bock. And thats where we cut The Doors demo, along with some Rick and The Ravens songs. “Rothchild and Botnick were two alchemists with sound. We were the alchemical music makers but they were alchemists with sound-adding a bit of this, a bit of that. Some reverb. Some high end. Lets hit it at 20k or 10k. Lets dial in a bit of bass in there. They were making this evil witches brew concoction as we went along. And the sound just got better and better. Q: And on this album, and subsequent sessions you were joined by a studio bassist who essentially followed and copied your bass lines done on the Fender Rhodes. A: I was the bass player of The Doors. When it came to recording I played a Fender Rhodes keyboard bass. The instrument was great in person because it had a deep rich sound and moved a lot of air. But in the recording studio, it lacked a pluck. It did not have the attack that a bass guitar would have-especially if you played a bass guitar with a pick. You had plenty of attack. So, on some of the songs, we brought in an actual bass player, one of the Los Angeles cats, Larry Knechtel. Who played the same bass line that I played on ‘Light My Fire, who doubled my bass line. They could then get rid of my bass part and use the nice sound that Larry Knechtel could get. The click and the bottom. Q: And, in the sound mix the keyboard was treated equally. Not a second thought overdub or hidden below in the collaboration. A: Well it had to be. We were the Modern Jazz Quartet! Q: You had schlepped some of these songs in demo form in 1966, and had played the material all over the clubs locally before you put them down on tape for the debut album. I would imagine you didnt labor over whole first L. P. in the studio. A: I had been in the World Pacific studio before, but Jim had never been in a vocal booth. He had some hesitations because he was a rookie. “Well the whole thing took ten days. Boom. Were done. Were out of here. ‘Light My Fire was two takes. ‘The End was two takes. Q: You then start Strange Days L. P. A: Album two is recorded on an eight-track. The first album was four-track. We now had four more tracks. That meant everything that we could do on the first album We would still have four more tracks leftover for overdubs. For experimentation. So we experimented in and out of the universe. I actually played one of the songs backwards. The song was played to me backwards and I had each bar written out with the chord change that went along with it and I started reading the music on the lower right-hand side and read right to left across the bottom line. And then jumped to the next line, when I got to the end of the previous line, jumped to the next line up on the right-hand side, reading everything backwards, bottom to top, getting closer and closer, finally to the top line and hoping that I end when the song begins. ‘Cause its all going along and its backwards. Im following (John) Densmores beat on the bass drum not knowing whats going to happen. And sure enough, I get to the last measure here are four more beats! I stopped and the music stopped. It was a miracle. And everyone went, ‘You did it Ray! And I went to the guys and said to them in the control room. And I said, ‘Please, whatever you do, help me here, never let me do his ever again. And they collectively said, ‘Thats a deal, Ray. " Q: You saw the studio becoming a laboratory. A: Exactly. It was a place where we could really experiment. We could put on our lab tech coats rather than coming in with our ‘Mod outfits. Its almost as if we put on our glasses. I felt like I was in a 1932 German Science Fiction movie, ‘Woman In The Moon, something along that line. Some Fritz Lang. It was like ‘Metropolis and we were wearing those glasses that you wear so you dont get sparks in your eyes and we had lab coats on. And we were preparing this strange concoction called ‘Strange Days. Q: You had already had some of the songs for it like ‘Moonlight Drive from 1965, 66, and now in 1967, its coming to fruition in the studio. Plus, Jim Morrisons voice really went further and deeper on the “Strange Days” expedition. A: Well, the man had his chops as they say. Jim got his chops together. He had a thick bull neck resembling a large engorged male organ. And by then, he could sing, man. That throat had opened up and that man was singing. Q: Theres the Morrison scenic lyric “under television skies” in “My Eyes Have Seen You” that chronicles a pre-cable TV world he witnessed. On Strange Days the Doors employ Doug Lubahn as studio bassist on the album. A: Yes. And Doug and I worked very closely together and I showed him what I wanted on the bass parts. And he would play it and improvise on what I had shown him and expand upon it. He was not playing exactly what I told him to play. He was adding his own little touch to it that made it extra exciting for all of us to be there. He was just a great stoner, hippie, good guy. Q: He played with a band Clear Light. A: They were originally called The Brain Train. Great name and they change it to Clear Light. ‘Why? I asked Doug, ‘Why did you change your (band) name? ‘I dont know, Ray. It wasnt up to me. Q: On Strange Days your organ work offers a tiny tip of the hat to Herbie Hancock and his composition “Watermelon Man” just on the end hang lyric conclusion of “When The Musics Over. ” A: Oh absolutely. Thats Herbie Hancock, man. Im borrowing a little bit of Herbies piano line. My keyboard line is a variation of his piano line on ‘Watermelon Man. Q: As you are hearing Jims lyrics to “When The Musics Over, ” late 1967, this is a timeline pre-Earth Day that began in 1970. Those lyrics are detailing ecological concerns and environmental chaos. Psychological territory away from ‘The End song. You and the band are the new soundtrack to global warning and the continual destruction of our planet. A: I knew Jim was a great poet. Theres no doubt about that. See thats why we put the band together in the first place. It was going to be poetry together with rock ‘n roll. Not like poetry and jazz. Or like it, it was poetry and jazz from the ‘50s, except we were doing poetry and rock ‘n roll. And our version of rock ‘n roll was whatever you could bring to the table. Robby bring your Flamenco guitar, Robby bring that bottleneck guitar, bring that sitar tuning. John bring your marching drums and your snares and your four on the floor. Ray bring your classical training and your blues training and your jazz training. Jim bring your Southern gothic poetry, your Arthur Rimbaud poetry. It all works in rock ‘n roll. So Jim was a magnificent poet. I loved his poetry. The fact that he was doing ecological poetry. ‘What have they done to the earth? Q: Again, like in the entire Doors studio journey, Rothchild and Botnick are taking the whole trip into a new sonic world. A: Absolutely. We knew each other. We were friends. We would hang out together. We would get high together and go to each others houses and hang out. Q: You know, as a kid, I would see some of The Doors in Los Angeles eating at Norms restaurant on La Cienega right next to the Elektra Studios. It was near our Fairfax High School. Even then I sort of knew you guys were recording and didnt bother you at a table or the counter. My Aquarius mother said something like, ‘Let them eat. Theyre on the clock. I didnt quite know then what she meant. At the time she was working for The Monkees and the Columbia Pictures movie studio. A: Absolutely. It was work. We didnt fool around. “I was not able to duck out of Sunset Sound, or TT&G or later at Electra to see bands or local jazz at Shelleys Manne-Hole. No! We were working. Were recording. The clock is ticking. This is your job. Your job starts at 2:00 p. m. in the afternoon and goes to 11:00 at night, 12 or one oclock in the morning. You go home. You got to bed. You get up the next day. Maybe at 11:00 a. have a leisurely breakfast, take care of a couple of things and go back to the recording studio. Because guess what, Harvey. The recording studio is the only place you wanted to be. I didnt want to see anybody. I didnt want to go to a film or a jazz club. I wanted to make records. Right then and right there. With Jim Morrison, Robby Krieger, John Densmore, Paul Rothchild, Bruce Botnick and Doug Lubahn. Great bass player. " Q:  Why do Jim Morrisons lyrics work so well in recordings and the printed page? A: Well, you know, Harvey, because lyrics are poetry. The words were well edited. Jim was good that way when it came to songs. When you are doing this written poetry you can really stretch out and you can really expand. And, no one so far has done an ‘Ezra Pound on Jim Morrison. With his poetry, hed throw this out, take this line, or two lines, but when it comes to music you gotta be very choosy because you only have a short period of time. Songs in a way, outside of like ‘The End, and ‘When The Musics Over, are sorta like haikus. The fit has to be very tight. “I saw Jims words before he started writing songs. So, when you see his words on the page thats poetry. I always thought of Jim as a good poet. But when he started writing songs, then everything became verse, chorus, verse, chorus. Really tight, and it was a whole other ball game. He put his words into an entirely different context. A musical context. A hit single in a three-minute context. I thought ‘Moonlight Drive was brilliant. Q: The Waiting For The Sun album. Some songs already existed in raw form but a lot of new material was written for this endeavor. A: You know its time to do a record when you have 10 or 12 songs together. When it hits a dozen times to enter the recording studio. I mean, we worked on those songs. I mean, when we would get together in the rehearsal studio they were polished. They were changed. They were adapted. Somebody, invariably Robby or Jim who would come up with the original idea. But boy, the four of us would get together, change and modify and polish the songs. Q: “Hello, I Love You” from Waiting For The Sun had been around for a while. A: Yes. It was a song Jim wrote on the beach when we used to live down in Venice. Dorothy would go off to work and Jim and I would go off to the beach around the rings on the sand at Muscle Beach and work out around the bars, rings and swings and get ourselves into physical shape. He was gorgeous. Man, he was perfect. He was a guy who had opened the doors of perception and made a blend of the American Indian and the American Cowboy. He was the white Anglo Saxon Protestant. The WASP who had taken on the mantle of the American Indian. He now was no longer a fighter of Indians. He was a lover of American Indians. Like John F. Kennedy, that guy would have been a great President. Pre-alcohol, would have been a great President. The alcohol, unfortunately, destroyed Jim Morrison. Q: Once again, some warnings about the environment are inherent in the lyrics. ‘Not To Touch The Earth. ” A: Sure. Yes. Ecology was very, very big. We were all trying to save the planet. The sun was the energy. The supreme energy. “The establishment, as we called it, the squares, as they were called in the Fifties, the establishment as they were called in the Sixties, were trying to stop drug use, the smoking of marijuana and trying to stop any kind of organic fertilizer. The word organic to them meant hippie, radical potheads and people who wanted to leave behind the organized religions and start some new tribal religion based on American Indian folklore. Thats indeed what we were. We called ourselves the new tribe. " Q: You served in the military before the Doors started. The bands “Unknown Soldier” must have been partially informed or reinforced by your stint. A: Everyone had to do military service. This was a time just before Vietnam. I was lucky. Everybody had a military obligation. You had to do your time in the service. So I did my time. Besides Thailand, I went to New York City and then I went to Okinawa, fell in with a bunch of jazz musicians, smoked a little grass there. I thought it was fabulous. Then I went to Thailand and where I had my real first Thai stick experience. Courtesy of Uncle Sam. Q: On Waiting For The Sun The Doors question government on “The Unknown Soldier” and “Five To One. ” A: That was a time when we started questioning the government. Everyone was questioning the government. That was all based on the war in Vietnam. And why are we in Vietnam? Why are we fighting these people? And the theory was, very much like in Iraq, it was the domino theory. If Vietnam falls then all of Southeast Asia is going to fall to the Communists and then they will be into the Philippines and then all the way to Australia will go Communists. The Communists scare is the same scare that is the same scare that we know with the Islamic scare. Q: Why does “Celebration of The Lizard” from “Waiting For The Sun” still resonate? Shaman and poet/singer Morrisons lyrics are prophetic. A: We were working in the future space. The Doors on their third album were in the future. And many things have come to pass that Jim Morrison wrote about. Q: It seems as if The Doors and technical people were allowed to create and flourish without record label monitoring or corporate interference. Did Elektra Records owner Jac Holzman come to the sessions? A: Once in a while. Sure. He was a real cheerleader if anything. Q: We are then lead into The Soft Parade. Was there a pre-production meeting where everyone voted to include the use of strings and horns on the album? A: We had made three albums with the same formation and at some point or another when you make albums you want to do an album with expanded sound. So you want to have some horns and strings. My God, everybody did it. And we were gonna do it too. I want some strings. I want some jazz arrangements. I want some classical arrangements. And everyone said yes. Great idea. And a record label that said it was fine. What was great about the record label was that Jac Holzman said, ‘Boys, do whatever You want. Just dont use the seven illegal words. George Carlins seven forbidden words. Other than that, anything goes. Whatever you want to do. And Paul Rothchild encouraged it. Q: You are using the new Elektra Studios as well. A: We have left Sunset Sound. The first two there and the Third at TT& G. on Sunset and Highland in Hollywood. We then went into Elektras new place. Fabulous. It was all wooden. Brand new state of the art facility. We thought it was great and would be able to play there for free. I mean, after wall, it was really the studio that The Doors built. ‘Jac, this is gonna be great when he showed it to us. And we get to record here for free. Jac said, ‘Free? No. You dont get to record here for free. But, Ill tell you what Ill do. For you guys a ten percent discount. laughs. But it was a great recording studio and they had a great funky organ in there. Gnarly organ. Q: George Harrison dropped by one of your Soft Parade sessions. He was visiting the Elektra studios. He mentioned all the musicians at your date reminded him of The Beatles Sgt. Peppers because of the orchestra booked. A: Yes. A Beatle in the room. A very charming guy. Very low key. And Im surprised John Densmore didnt become good friends with him. Q: And, once again, the Morrison vocals are potent, distinctive and his voice more confident than ever. A: Hes no longer a blues singer. Hes added Frank Sinatra crooning to his voice and did an absolutely brilliant job. Terrific. Girls loved it. ‘Touch Me a number one song. Q: You also had individual writing credits for the first time on the album sleeve. A: Thats a great story. Because of ‘Touch Me. The song was initially called ‘Hit Me, and Jim is gonna say hit me. Its ‘Hit Me like in poker. And Jim said, ‘No Its not like poker. Its like someone is gonna walk up to me and are gonna hit me. You gotta change the line. ‘To what? ‘Touch Me. Beautiful. And along with that ballad part he sings in ‘Tell All The People the line with ‘Get your guns…Follow me down. “Morrison, a military boy said, ‘I am not going to say that. And Robby replied, ‘thats the way I wrote it and you cant change it. Robby was going to stand up to Jim at that point. And Jim said, ‘I am not going to do it. “And Robby said, ‘well thats the song. And Jim said, ‘Were gonna have to say that you wrote this song. And Robby said, ‘OK. Fine with me. And that lasted for one or two more albums. Guitarist Robby Krieger was another kind of songwriter. He penned a lot of the popular radio hits and chart singles. “Love Me Two Times, ” “Spanish Caravan, ” the lyrics to “Tell All The People, ” “Touch Me, ” “Runnin Blue, ” “Love Her Madly, ” and co-wrote “Peace Frog” and “Light My Fire” with Morrison. "Robby was a different sort of lyric writer. You know, Robby might be the secret weapon of the Doors, we get this great guitar player who plays bottleneck, and all of a sudden he comes in and plays ‘Light My Fire, the first song he ever co-wrote with Jim. And then Robby wrote ‘Love Me, Two Times, ‘Love Her Madly. ‘Touch Me. Lots of Doors hit singles. Another guy with a high IQ. " Q: On The Soft Parade you had Harvey Brooks as well as Doug Lubahn on bass, saxophonist Curtis Amy and George Bohanan the trombonist. A: Wasnt that great. Curtis Amy, who was married to Merry Clayton. Curtis was a big nationally known jazz horn player who lived in Los Angeles. He takes he solo on ‘Touch Me. It might have been the first time a real jazz saxophone solo went to number one on pop charts. And, we brought the strings and horn players to some shows and TV appearances. It was a great deal of fun for me to bring them on stage. “It didnt work for a lot of the critics and teenagers. ‘Were not coming to see you guys expand. We want to see ‘Light My Fire. Four Doors. The sexy lead singer. You play the songs. No horns. No strings. No jazz soloing. Well, youre gonna get it anyway. Like, at the Forum show you get Jerry Lee Lewis, Lonnie Mack, Sweetwater and a Chinese Pipa player, too. Q: And by ‘ The Soft Parade Jim Morrison started to indulge and really drink. A: Jimbo came out. They call it the demon rum. Theres a demon in the bottle. And theres a demon in that white powder, too. A demon on the blade. You know what those things do? They open the trap door of the subconscious and allow some creature to come out. And the alcohol for Jim, a genetic pre-disposition famial pre-disposition to alcohol, something came out, man. “Some kind of combination. He went from being the poet to a shooter. Shooter Morrison. I was flabbergasted. “We started experimenting in the studio. I wouldnt allow anything to get out of the recording studio without my approval. If I didnt think it was right it did not go on a record. Nothing happened without my OK. We did some composite vocals. You do what you have to do. If Jim sings one line great. Fine. Then lets get the next line. Lets get the words, man. Whatever it takes to get the best possible performance. While you can see that Jim Morrison is undergoing a transformation. Right before our very eyes. And I hoped that this transformation was short-lived. But it wasnt. "This cant last. This is not Jim. " Courtesy of Rhino Q: The Doors then arrive at Morrison Hotel. Why this direction? A: Well, we had done our horns and strings experimentation. We had had a great time. I had a great time. Critically it was our least acclaimed album. However, it has stood the test of time and there are many great songs on there. So, you know what? Weve done that experimentation. Lets go back to the blues. Lets get dark and funky. Lets go downtown for the album cover. We went to the Hard Rock Café on skid row with (photographer) Henry Diltz. And we went to a flophouse called The Morrison Hotel. Rooms A sign read 2. 50 and up. It was definitely supposed to be a funky album and you can see that on the inside photo and the front and back cover. Album covers were always important. We were involved heavily in that process. You could never just turn it over to the record company. Everything that The Doors turned out had to be stamped by The Doors. We approve of this. “My God, Strange Days, what an album cover. We told the art director from Elektra Records, Bill Harvey, ‘Make something ‘Fellini-esque. And he did that on his own. Thats all we told him. We saw the photos and said, ‘Bill this is fabulous. Youve outdone yourself. And Bill said, before he died, ‘Thats the best album cover I ever did. Q: And, theres a song called ‘Waiting For The Sun on Morrison Hotel. A: We loved the title. But the song had not come together earlier. We finally got it and a beautiful piece of music. It needed to cook more. Sometimes Doors songs came out of the collective conscious whole. ‘Bam. Thats it. Others needed to cook and they needed be worked on. And ‘Waiting For The Sun was one of those songs with a great title and the song took a while to jell. Q: Its a hard mean album. Morrisons voice lends itself to this specific material. A: It was a barrelhouse album and barrelhouse singing. Hes smoking cigarettes. ‘Jesus Christ, Jim. Do you have to smoke cigarettes and drink booze? He didnt say it but it was like, ‘This is what a bluesman does. Oh fuck. Thats right. Youre an old bluesman. He says that in one of his lines. ‘Ive been singing the blues since the world began. And Rick and The Ravens was a surf and blues band from the South Bay. ‘Roadhouse Blues. Q: How could Jim Morrison with his Dionysian demeanor write and suggest instruction or guidance lyrically in that song, “Keep your eyes on the road your hands upon the wheel, ” when most of the time he certainly didnt operate or drive a car like this himself? A: Well that was the better Angel. Thats Jim Morrison. Not Jimbo. Jimbo was the guy who took Jim to Paris and said, “lets go and die in Paris. Were going to have a death in Paris. Like Thomas Manns novella Death In Paris. That was Jimbo... Q: In addition, the album brings us as into the water and film noir aspect of Los Angeles. Water is a principal theme explored. “Ship of Fools. ” The “River of Sadness” cited in “Peace Frog, ” and the salvation of the ocean and the destination charted in “Land Ho! ” A: Water, ships. It clicks big time. The water images and that beach down in Venice. And that ocean side. ‘Moonlight Drive again. And the water always entered into Morrisons life. And where does his life expire? In the water in the bathtub in Paris. From the amniotic fluid of his birth to the bathtub in Paris. His final expiration. Q: Lonnie Mack plays bass on a couple of tracks on Morrison Hotel. He had an instrumental hit with a version of Chuck Berrys “Memphis. ” A: He was great, man. Lonnie Mack. He was either recording in the next studio, or working around us, or came down, I cant remember why he appears. Paul Rothchild said, “Hey. This is Lonnie Mack. He introduced him to Robby. ‘Hey, you wanna play some bass? ‘Id love too, guys. Simple as that. That was a great deal of fun. The album was definitely blues, ‘Raymond Chandler. Downtown Los Angeles. Dalton Trumbo. ‘John Fante. ‘City of Night John Rechy. Q: Then there is the tune “Peace Frog. ” In 1995 you told me for Goldmine magazine, “Blood in the streets in the town of Chicago” is obviously about the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago. It was written after the young people rioted against the war, in Vietnam. ” A: Those are great lines. Morrison goes further to say, ‘Blood is the rose of mysterious union/blood will be born in the birth of a nation. So its the idea that blood is the cleansing property, and from blood will come the healing and the enlightenment of the nation. America is what Jim is singing about. ‘Birth of a Nation. Another cinematic reference. Q: In that interview you mentioned you had a class at the UCLA School of Film with director Josef Von Sternberg ( The Blue Angel, Marocco, Shanghai Express) who applauded your student film Evergreen. “Very good Manzarek. Very good. ” You cited his praise as one of the greatest moments of your life, adding that Sternbergs influence was inherent in the way he paced his movies and the psychological weight of his films informed the way you and Jim together wedded a cinema and music mixture. A: Hes the guy who really kind of gave a real sense of darkness to The Doors, not that we wouldnt have been there anyway. But having Von Sternberg seeing the deep psychology of his movies, and the pace at which he paced his films, really influenced Doors songs and Doors music. The film school is always there. Our song structure was based on the cinema. Loud. Soft. Gentle. Violent. A Doors song is again, aural, and aural cinema. We always tried to make pictures in your mind. Your mind ear. You hear pictures with the music itself. Q: During 2007 we talked again about Doors catalog utilized in movies and soundtracks. The film school influence is obvious again, especially on ‘LAmerica on Morrison Hotel. A: It was written for the director Michaelangelo Antonioni for his film Zabriskie Point. And we played it for him at the rehearsal studio and backed him up against the wall with the volume. We played it the way we normally play and too loud for this elderly Italian gentleman. I could see him pressed up against the door trying to get out of the place. We finish the song, he slides the door open and steps outside and it was almost like he was saying, ‘Goodbye boys. Goodbye Hollywood. And then he goes with Pink Floyd. It was all too much for him. He just couldnt do it. Q: Just before the album L. Woman formally began, producer Paul Rothchild leaves the project. A: Yes. He did a great service to us. We played the songs in the studio so Paul could hear what the songs were. First at the rehearsal studio and then over to Elektra. I think we went back to Sunset Sound, too. We were bored. He was bored. We played badly. And Paul said, ‘you know what guys? Theres nothing here I can do. Im done. Youre are gonna have to do it yourselves. And he walked out the door. We looked at each other and said, ‘Shit. Bummer. And Bruce (Botnick) said, ‘Hey, Ill do it! Ill be the producer. John (Densmore) said, ‘Well co-produce with you. Bruce said, ‘Thats a deal. Lets all do it together. And then Jim said, ‘Can we record at our rehearsal studio? And we all said, ‘Hey, we play great at our rehearsal studio. Lets do it. Can it be done? And Bruce said, ‘Of course I can do it there. Ill set the board up and a studio upstairs. You guys record downstairs. Thats where we make the album and it will be virtually live. ‘Yea! And we got excited like that Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland ‘Lets put on a show! “The only thing with Bruce that was really different than working with Paul was that we didnt do as many takes. We knew when we had it. The thing about Rothchild ‘he was a slave driver. Thats not really true. We did do a lot of takes on ‘Unknown Soldier and that drove Robby crazy. Q: And, Jerry Scheff plays bass on L. Woman. A: Botnick brings in a guy who is going to be playing with Elvis Presley. ‘I got Elvis Presley's bass player. ‘Shit, man. He came in. A very cool guy who is playing with Elvis Presley. Q: And, you and Jim just earlier had watched the Elvis Presley 1968 Comeback Special on television. I wrote the liner notes in 2008 for the CD reissue. Elvis is wearing leather on that program. And I believe Jim had his leather pants made on Sunset Blvd. in 1967, 68. A: Yes. We watched it. Elvis puts on his Morrison outfit. He had seen Morrison. He knew what he was doing. Imitating Jim. Q: L. Woman is a logical step from “Morrison Hotel. ” A: I think its the same Doors but a continual growth, continual evolution of The Doors. Continual revolution of The Doors. Q: The title track L. Woman embodies movement, freedom, lust and dust. A: L. Woman is just a fast L. kick-ass freeway driving song in the key of A with barely any chord changes at all. And it just goes. Its like Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg heading from L. up to Bakersfield on the 5 Freeway. Lets go, man. Q: The haunting “Riders On The Storm. ” In 1995 you ran down the song to me commenting on that highway and freeway chase depicted. “The storm is an unresolved psyche. We are moving into the Jungian collective unconscious. And those motivations in the collective unconscious are the same in 1976, 1968, 1969 as they are in 1994, 1995. There are needs that we all have on the human planet, and we must satisfy those needs and come to grips with the darkness and the interior of the human psyche. ” A: Its the final classic, man. Interestingly, Robby and Jim come in and were working on ‘Riders On The Storm. And then they start to play it and it sounded like ‘An old cowpoke riding out one dark and misty day. It was like ‘Ghost Riders in The Sky. No. We dont do anything like ‘Ghost Riders In The Sky as much as I like it by Vaughn Monroe. And Jim likes it. Whats next? A version of Frankie Laines ‘Mule Train? Doors dont do that. Lets make this hip. The idea is good. Were going to go out on the desert. ‘Theres a killer on the road. This has got to be dark, strange and moody. Let me see what I can do here. It was like ‘Light My Fire. It just came to me. I got it. The bass line. It became this dark, moody Sunset Strip 1948 jazz joint. Q: And, only Morrison could inject a Hollywood movie studio system reference in the lyric ‘an actor out on loan. A: Yeah. How ‘bout that, man. Q: Every Doors concert was unique. Some specific songs in the set but lots of improv and no set order done every night. A: The concerts were an extension of the audio document. It was not yin and yang. One was an extension of the other. There were improvisations in the recording studio but within their soloing sections. And quite frankly, I never knew what I was going to play. I knew the chord changes. I didnt know how I was going to structure my A minor 7th chord. That would vary from take to take. It would always be an A minor 7 th and in the groove. So there was improvisation in the studio but here was major improvisation live. Because thats the whole point of live. You have the record as your foundation and then you build upon that in the live performance. Harvey Kubernik is the author of 15 books. His literary music anthology Inside Cave Hollywood: The Harvey Kubernik Music InnerViews and InterViews Collection Vol. 1, was published in December 2017, by Cave Hollywood. Kuberniks The Doors Summers Gone was published by Other World Cottage Industries in February 2018. Its been nominated   for the 2019 Association for Recorded Sound Collections   Awards for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound Research. During November 2018, Sterling/Barnes and Noble published Kuberniks The Story of The Band From Big Pink to the Last Waltz. In 2019, The National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress in Washington, D. C. have asked Harvey Kubernik to pen an essay on the landmark The Band album, now celebrating a 50th anniversary edition in 2019. Harvey Kubernik is currently researching and writing a mult-voice narrative book on Jimi Hendrix for Sterling/Barnes and Noble scheduled for publication last quarter of 2020. Harvey Kuberniks 1995 interview, Berry Gordy: A Conversation With Mr. Motown appears in The Pop, Rock & Soul Reader edited by David Brackett published in 2019 by Oxford University Press. Brackett is a Professor of Musicology in the Schulich School of Music at McGill University in Canada. Harvey joined a distinguished lineup which includes LeRoi Jones, Johnny Otis, Ellen Willis, Nat Hentoff, Jerry Wexler, Jim Delehant, Ralph J. Gleason, Greil Marcus, and Cameron Crowe. Kuberniks 1996 interview with poet/author Allen Ginsberg was published in Conversations With Allen Ginsberg, edited by David Stephen Calonne for the University Press of Mississippi in their 2019 Literary Conversations Series. Harvey is featured in the 2014 book by Jeff Burger on Leonard Cohen Interviews and Encounters for Chicago Review Press. During 2015 the University Press of Mississippi published a Harvey Kubernik interview with D. Pennebaker in their book series, Conversations with Filmmakers, edited by Dr. Keith Beattie. This century Kubernik wrote the liner note booklets to the CD re-releases of Carole Kings Tapestry, Allen Ginsbergs Kaddish, Elvis Presley The 68 Comeback Special and The Ramones End of the Century. During 2019 Kubernik is serving as a Consultant on a new 2-part documentary on the musical legacy of Laurel Canyon. Alison Ellwood is directing the documentary who helmed the authorized History of the Eagles.   Broadcast date is first quarter 2020 on EPIX Television. Feature photo by Henry Diltz.

THE DOORS: BREAK ON THRU – A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK Starring: Robby Krieger, John Densmore, Taylor Hawkins, Rami Jaffee, Robert DeLeo, Stephen Perkins, John Doe, Exene Cervenka, Warren Haynes Featuring: Brian Ray, Emily Armstrong, Nasri, Andrew Watt, Waylon Krieger, Jim Manczarek, Phil Chen, Nathan Wilmarth, Pablo Manzarek, Ben Fong-Torres Director: Justin Kruetzmann Executive Producers: John Densmore & Robby Krieger Producer: Jeff Jampol THE DOORS: BREAK ON THRU – A CELEBRATION OF RAY MANZAREK is a hybrid concert and documentary capturing a 2016 performance in Los Angeles, CA by surviving Doors members John Densmore and Robby Krieger to honor fellow Doors member Ray Manzarek on what would have been his birthday on February 12th. The Doors were born when Ray Manzarek met  Jim Morrison on Venice Beach in 1965. Ray became the beating heart of The Doors and the architect of their intoxicating keyboard sound. Manzareks evocative playing fused rock, jazz, blues, bossa nova and an array of other styles into something utterly, dazzlingly new. The setlist from the concert consists of Doors songs performed by John and Robby alongside a cast of all-star guest musicians including Taylor Hawkins and Rami Jaffee (Foo Fighters) Robert DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilots) Stephen Perkins (Janes Addiction) Exene and John Doe (X) Warren Haynes (Govt Mule) Brian Ray (Paul McCartney) Andrew Watt and more. The film also includes rare archival footage of the band, conversations with Jim Morrison and Ray Manzarek, and esteemed music journalist Ben Fong-Torres, as well as new interviews with John and Robby. Advance Festival Seating Tickets: 12 general; 10 Lincoln Theatre Members + applicable fees. Ticket prices include a 1. 50 preservation fee. Special Screening - No Passes.

Love this movie. Love The Doors. Love Jim Morrison. Thankyou 🙏🏻💖🌠. I was born in 1953 and am glad I grew up during the best music of all time that made History. Break on Thru: A Celebration of Ray Manzarek and The door cinema. Break on thru: a celebration of ray manzarek and the doors movie.

 

 

 

 

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