doors - L.A Woman album flac
Performer: doorsTitle: L.A Woman
MP3 album: 1515 mb
FLAC album: 1951 mb
Rating: 4.1
Other formats: DMF MP2 FLAC MP4 MOD ASF AC3
Genre: Other
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The sixth studio album and the final album with Jim Morrison in their lineup, . Woman is by far The Doors' most blues-oriented. Released April 19th, 1971 through Elektra Records, the album peaked at the ninth spot on the Billboard 200. Morrison’s poetic ardor is undiminished and his vocal performance is unwavering in it’s enthusiasm, while the group as a whole returned to their original blues rock roots. The seven-minute title track was a car-cruising classic that celebrated both the glamour and seediness of Los Angeles; the other long cut, the brooding and jazzy Riders on the Storm.
Woman" is a song by American rock band the Doors. The song is the title track on their 1971 album . Woman, the final album to feature Jim Morrison before his death on 3 July 1971. In the song's bridge, Morrison repeats the phrase "Mr. Mojo Risin'," which is an anagram of "Jim Morrison". The phrase "city of night" that Morrison repeats several times throughout the song is the title of a novel by John Rechy, originally published in 1963
The last official Doors studio album, . Woman was still high on the charts when, like the "actor out on loan" of its closing track, "Riders on the Storm," Jim Morrison died in a Paris bathtub in the summer of 1971
Woman, Jim Morrison’s swan song with the Doors, was released on April 19, 1971, no one outside the band’s inner circle could have guessed that it would effectively end the quartet’s tale, much less mark the last recorded output of Morrison’s life. The two post-Morrison Doors albums are a postscript at best). The down-and-dirty, funky feel of the album’s opening track served notice straight out of the gate that this was not the strings-and-horns Doors of The Soft Parade but a sharp turn back towards the R&B and blues roots that were at the core of the band’s toolkit. Robby Krieger’s feral slide guitar sounds suspiciously reminiscent of Randy California, axeman from another pioneering . outfit of the era, Spirit, who had just released their magnum opus and the final album by their original lineup, The 12 Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus, in November 1970, a month before work began on .
The final album with Jim Morrison in the lineup is by far their most blues-oriented, and the singer's poetic ardor is undiminished, though his voice sounds increasingly worn and craggy on some numbers. Actually, some of the straight blues items sound kind of turgid, but that's more than made up for by several cuts that rate among their finest and most disturbing work
Well, I just got into town about an hour ago Took a look around, see which way the wind blow Where the little girls in their Hollywood bungalows. Are you a lucky little lady in the City of Light Or just another lost angel? City of Night, City of Night City of Night, City of Night, woo, c'mon. woman, you're my woman Little . Thanks to Michael Bradley, Austin, Nolan Wyda, Curtis Bracken, juan garcia for correcting these lyrics. The song is the title track on the album. The album is the last with Jim Morrison, who died three months after its release. Jim Morrison recorded his vocal part for this song in the bathroom of the studio to achieve the natural reverberation.





