<< DVD5 The Doors - Soundstage Performances
The Doors - Soundstage Performances
This spot is not verified, the name of the sender has not been confirmed
Category Image
FormatDVD5
SourceRetail
LanguageNo subtitles
GenreMusic
TypeMovie
Date 1 decade, 4 years
Size n/a
 
Website http://thedoors.com
 
Sender X-Locutus
Tag PowerZone
 
Searchengine Search
 
Number of spamreports 0

Post Description

The Doors Soundstage Performances comes nowhere near the quality and inclusiveness of the absolute best Doors compilation on DVD, Universal's The Doors - 30th Anniversary Edition.

But for fans of the group or of its Byronesque lead singer Jim Morrison, this compilation has some historically interesting material, tracing three years in the group's short and troubled life.

It starts off with a 1967 Toronto performance of one of their classic epic songs, The End, continues with five numbers filmed in a Danish television station in 1968, and concludes with a final appearance on a 1969 PBS television special in the States, complete with interview.

The 1967 and 1969 material is in colour. The 1969 video material is in very poor condition; probably as good as could be found today, but with sub-standard image and sound.

The highlight is the set from Danish television. This is filmed in stark black-and-white, without audience, and with the Doors having to hype themselves up at a recording time of around 6 am, after a concert the night before.

They do so brilliantly. Jim Morrison is mad, poetic and obsessed to perfection; Ray Manzarek is focused with jewel-like precision on his music. This is great, though short, footage.

Runtime:120 min (DVD)Country:USALanguage:EnglishColor:Black and White | Color Sound Mix:Dolby Digital | DTS
That footage comprises about a quarter of the disc's running time of two hours. The other performances are only useful in tracing the group's fast collapse as Jim Morrison falls victim to his alcoholism. The 1969 footage shows him at the pivotal point - starting to look raddled, but not yet bloated; still in strong voice but somehow uncertain, and losing the supreme confidence of the arrogant poet.

The disc is padded out by lengthy reminiscences by the surviving Doors members - five minutes would have been enough, not almost an hour. Doors fans will want this disc for the Danish footage; the rest is strictly filler material.

Comments # 0