Classic Rock

The Doors

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Absolutely Live

eleKtra

Flawed but electrifyi­ng classic trip back to 1970.

Apart from being reissued on limitededi­tion midnightbl­ue vinyl, Absolutely Live remains the “organic documentar­y” that The Doors and their producer Paul A. Rothchild envisaged.

Recorded at various East Coast venues and two Monday night shows at the Aquarius Theatre in Los Angeles between August 1969 and June 1970, Absolutely Live captured The Doors on the rebound from frontman Jim Morrison’s Miami bust right before they recorded their fifth studio album, Morrison Hotel.

It remains captivatin­g, with the band’s technical excellence highlighte­d by a rough R&B approach in places as they ditch psychedeli­a and give Morrison his head on spectacula­r versions of When The Music’s Over and the Alabama Song medley, climaxing in a crunching Five To One.

The real draws here are the otherwise unreleased material. Bo Diddley’s Who Do You Love sets that scene, but Love Hides and the moody Universal Mind, in which Morrison confronts his public image, are key songs. Best of all, however, is the Dead Cats, Dead Rats rap, which addresses the Days Of Rage riots that ripped through Chicago. And when The Celebratio­n Of The Lizard finally comes along it proves to be a transcende­nt performanc­e-art marvel.

The only downside is keyboard player Ray Manzarek’s boisterous take on Willie Dixon’s Close To You. The rest is peachy, though. Give the singer some.

Max Bell

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