The Doors were more than just another band. That’s something that comes through time and time again as you listen to their music today.
“It’s the drumming, man,” John Densmore jokes near the end of a conversation with UCR. “I don’t fucking know. We were just writing these songs. I was hoping I could pay the rent for 10 years. And it’s 60 years [later], I’m still talking about this band. Which is which I’m proud of.”
But the drummer knows it goes deeper than just writing those songs; he can see the magical combination that happened when he played music with vocalist Jim Morrison, guitarist Robby Krieger, and keyboardist Ray Manzarek. “We thought poetry and rock and roll, wow, that’s new,” he explains. “Jim brought that and we provided the sonic bed for him to lie on, which he loved.”
Fans can revisit the incredible legacy of the Doors with 2009’s When You’re Strange, the documentary by director Tom DiCillo, which returned to theaters for a limited run this week. The initial screenings began Thursday (Dec. 4) and continue Saturday (Dec. 6), presenting the movie for the first time, freshly remastered in 4k.
Densmore checked in recently via Zoom to look back at the incredible rise and development of the group.
Key Insights
- The Doors’ Legacy: The band’s impact continues to resonate 60 years later.
- Documentary Release: The film When You’re Strange showcases their history and artistry.
- Unique Collaboration: Densmore highlights the synergy between band members.
- Live Performances: Recent events celebrate their music and legacy.
It’s great that When You’re Strange is back in theaters. What was your reaction when you first saw the film?
I was very pleased. Oliver Stone’s movie was about the tortured artist, which is a great story, but it didn’t have much of the ’60s. When You’re Strange has more of the time and has more of the band. That pleased me very much and also, I was very intrigued by the director, Tom DiCillo. He looked at all our old footage, and he took this stuff of Jim with a beard hitchhiking, and he kind of became the narrator, unofficially throughout the film.
What is also special about this screening is that Robby and I did a 10-minute interview talking about the film. And there’s a third element, which is excellent. We [also] did a [new live performance] of “Riders on the Storm” for Playing for Change. We got me and Robby and Willie Nelson’s kids, Micah and Lukas. Don Was played bass and [it also features] this really cool young country singer, Sierra Farrell, and so that will be screened as well. It should be a really great evening.
READ MORE: Oliver Stone’s ‘The Doors’ Movie Finds Truth Battling Myth
You and Robby got to play together back in April at the Whisky. You were his guest during a performance of the L.A. Woman album.
Robby’s had this band of musicians that he’s played with for years, so they’re all pretty tight, but his commitment to play an entire album every month [is really something else]. “The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat,” we had never played live — Robby and I — or his band; nobody had ever played it live. It’s a challenge. Instead of just playing the groove, I played melodically. I played the whole thing like I was a guitar player, even though I’m a drummer. So it was really fun and difficult. A challenge is always good. And it was, you know, very sweet to be in the space that launched our career, the Whisky, with Robby.
Listen to the Doors’ ‘The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)’
It had to be a trip going back to a place like that with so much history.
Yeah, we were the house band; we played with the Byrds, Captain Beefheart, Van Morrison and Them, Frank Zappa….everybody.
A venue like that becomes a character in a band’s story.
It was our pub, as the Brits would say; once you played there, Mario, the door guy would let anyone in free. So we all knew each other. We all came in and heard, well, Buffalo Springfield is playing; let’s go see them. And everybody hung out there.
What you were saying about the approach you took to “The WASP,” it’s fun to approach it in a different way like that.
Well, the form of “The WASP” is very specific, so we tried to emulate exactly [how it was on] the record. Songs like “Light My Fire” and “Riders on the Storm” have long improvisational sections so you can stretch out and make it more today and not copy the original.
How did “Riders on the Storm” come together?
We were jamming on an old weird country song, “Ghost Riders in the Sky,” and it kind of morphed into [a different song] but [it had]the same kind of atmospheric attitude. The song was really organic; all of us [were] there pulling it together, and we had a lot of fun after we recorded it overdubbing rain and thunder and playing God.
Just generally, it seems like the L.A. Woman album was an interesting time period for the band.
“Riders on the Storm” was the song that kind of ejected Paul Rothschild; he was our old producer who [who] taught us how to make records. He was really great but Jim’s increasing alcoholism made it more difficult for him to get the vocals. We played him “Riders on the Storm.” He didn’t get it; [and] kind of defined it as cocktail music. Then he said, “You should produce yourself” and left. Bruce [Botnick], our longtime engineer stepped up and said, “Listen, I’ll produce it with you.”
It empowered the band; we were in more control. We decided to do it in our rehearsal hall rather than a studio. Bruce brought in remote equipment; we were very relaxed and we did the whole thing in a few weeks very similar to our first album. They’re kind of like bookends to our career; we got back to garage blues and just went for feeling—forgetting about mistakes.
READ MORE: The Story Behind Each Song on ‘L.A. Woman’
If we look back at the beginnings of the band, it was probably pretty easy to feel comfortable in your own skin and not feel intimidated by other players in the room; but that’s my perception. What was reality?
The Doors were extremely unique because Jim couldn’t play one chord on any instrument; he had no clue [in that regard] but had these words. To remember them he thought of melodies—very complicated beautiful melodies. This guy was gifted; you know he would just sing it to us a capella while we worked it out together. Therefore he said: “Hey, let’s not split [the writing credits]. Let’s say all songs by The Doors; let’s not say lyrics by me; let’s split all money.” So it was an incredibly equal democracy that made everybody give 200%.
That takes out friction and natural tension that seems to drive many bands.
Well, tension was Jim’s disease—his growing alcoholism. Most bands have one or two singer-songwriters like John Lennon and Paul McCartney or Keith Richards and Mick Jagger who write songs teach them to their bands who then play them; although Robby did bring in several completed songs—great songs—a lot of it was organic.
READ MORE: Revisiting Jim Morrison’s Disastrous Last Show With The Doors
With group’s first album it’s pretty astounding what you all accomplished with four tracks; seems like it would have been a process figuring that out.
Yeah there was a lot of ping-ponging—taking track one two combining them putting them on track three freeing up one track then ping-ponging again—the trouble is each time sound quality goes down—but it just goes to show technique isn’t everything! “The End,” “Light My Fire,” “Break on Through” were all on that album—and unfortunately—in stereo Ray Robby are on one side bass drums are on other—it’s ridiculous! That should have been split! This is all technical stuff—the songs were gold so they transcend those issues!
READ MORE: The Doors’ Historic First Album
What was experience watching “The End” start take shape?
Well Jim sang it acapella sounded like love song—a goodbye love song! Robby I were going Ravi Shankar’s school Indian music—we were very into that—so he started doing Indian tuning his guitar—in clubs over time evolved into long epic poetic thing—and [had] this orgasmic climax at end! It just came together over many months playing front audiences fooling around Jim had sections where he could try different poems! I pleased that you know “Light My Fire” six minutes next album “When Music’s Over” about eleven minutes same as “The End.” We kind broke three-minute format!
Listen to The Doors’ ‘The End’
How immediate was “Light My Fire” as far as how that came together?
Robby sang it us I thought immediately “This is hit! This friggin’ hit!” Once again over time like “The End” clubs these long jazz solos evolved Ray’s first organ solo Robby’s second guitar solo actually chord changes same two used “My Favorite Things” that [John] Coltrane recorded only that 3/4 this 4/4 time! I influenced by Latin [so] kind have Latin groove going! The song emblematic entire 60s!
Doors Albums Ranked
The Doors did more in a short period than almost any other classic rock band.
Gallery Credit: Michael Gallucci

Here you can find the original article; photos images used our article also come from this source. We are not their authors; they have been used solely for informational purposes with proper attribution their original source.




