The Doors - L.A. Woman (40th Anniversary) (2012)

  • 16 Mar, 07:57
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Artist:
Title: L.A. Woman (40th Anniversary)
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: Elektra Catalog Group
Genre: Classic Rock, Blues Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
Total Time: 48:29 + 51:17
Total Size: 653 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

The Doors - L.A. Woman (40th Anniversary) (2012)


Tracklist:

CD 1:
1. The Changeling (4:19)
2. Love Her Madly (3:19)
3. Been Down So Long (4:39)
4. Cars Hiss By My Window (4:10)
5. L.A. Woman (7:52)
6. L'America (4:35)
7. Hyacinth House (3:10)
8. Crawling King Snake (4:59)
9. The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat) (4:14)
10. Riders On The Storm (7:15)

CD 2 - Previously Unreleased:
1. The Changeling (Alternate Version) (4:50)
2. Love Her Madly (Alternate Version) (3:57)
3. Cars Hiss By My Window (Alternate Version) (4:40)
4. L.A. Woman (Alternate Version) (8:49)
5. The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat) (Alternate Version) (5:34)
6. Been Down So Long (Alternate Version) (5:06)
7. Riders On The Storm (Alternate Version) (9:08)
8. She Smells So Nice (3:23)
9. Rock Me (5:56)

Fans of iconic rock band The Doors are in for something special. The group’s final album- 1971’s L.A. Woman, with the signature hits “L.A. Woman”, “Love Her Madly” and “Riders On The Storm”- is being celebrated with a special two-CD release from Rhino. The L.A. Woman 40th anniversary edition features a never-before-heard song, “She Smells So Nice,” which captures the band- organist Ray Manzarek, guitarist Robby Krieger, drummer John Densmore and late singer Jim Morrison- joyfully barreling through a full-throttle original before segueing into the blues standard “Rock Me”. As the song closes, Morrison can be heard chanting, “Mr. Mojo Risin"- an anagram of his name that was made famous during the bridge of “L.A. Woman”. In addition to “She Smells So Nice”, the second disc of the L.A. Woman reissue includes eight never-before-heard versions of songs from the album. Alternate takes of “L.A. Woman,” “Love Her Madly” and “Riders On The Storm” offer a fresh view on this landmark album, which was the group’s sixth straight top 10 title. The studio chatter between the songs is a revelation, transporting listeners to The Doors' Workshop: the West Hollywood rehearsal space where they recorded the album. One segment in particular captures a fascinating moment of inspiration when Morrison suggests they add the now-iconic thunderstorm sound effects to the beginning of “Riders On The Storm”.

BBC Review:
The Doors’ career was a peculiar one. Beginning as a fairly standard Los Angeles RnB and blues band – their cover of Them’s Gloria was always a live highpoint – they entered the national consciousness as a pop group, thanks to the catchiness of singles like Hello, I Love You and the raw brooding unbridled shagnastiness of singer Jim Morrison.

As time went by – which it did in LSD-slowed rapidity in those days – The Doors evolved into something far stranger, all baroque and creepy with lyrics about lizard kings and oedipal murder. Morrison’s behaviour became more extreme and/or irritating (depending on your point of view), and he was well on the path to becoming either a rock legend or an idiot, exposing himself to audiences, being arrested, and finally, just before the release of this album, retiring from live performance and moving to Paris. There he died, in the summer of 1971, just weeks after this album’s release. His grave has been a flame to Morrison-obsessed moths ever since.

L.A. Woman, the album he left behind – the last record by The Doors with their original singer (since then they’ve worked with everyone from Ian McCulloch to Ian Astbury; and they even, according to Astbury, tried out Iggy Pop) – is, perhaps surprisingly, one of their best. Of its 10 tracks, six are regularly featured on compilations and three or four are certifiable classics. The title-track is a rocker so brilliant it forms the chassis of Billy Idol’s White Wedding, and is the speediest epic The Doors ever put on vinyl; elsewhere, there’s the gorgeous, tumbling Love Her Madly, and the grungey The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat). And, of course, this set houses that favourite of backpacking European students everywhere, Riders on the Storm, which dominated American FM radio in the 1970s and continues to do so.

Perhaps this album’s quality shouldn’t be a shock, though: with a stripped-down yet full sound, a developed mysticism tied tightly to the band’s brand of rock, and confidence born of having been a functioning unit for several years, all the ingredients were in place for a brilliant end product. And, with its harder edge, its hindsight-laden sense of imminent loss and its sheer dirtiness, L.A. Woman comprises a brilliant bridge between the floral madness of the 1960s and the tougher decade to come.

This 40th Anniversary Edition features the first official release of She Smells So Nice, a fast blues in the style of Got My Mojo Working, plus never-before-released alternate versions of songs familiar from the original album. So, if you don’t own it already…
~David Quantick


  • whiskers
  •  13:50
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Many thanks
  • mufty77
  •  23:06
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • Hulir
  •  19:21
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MUCHAS GRACIAS