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The Doors. Jim Morrison – vocals, Moog synthesizer on "Strange Days" [4] Ray Manzarek – keyboards, marimba; Robby Krieger – guitar; John Densmore – drums; Additional musicians. Doug Lubahn – bass guitar (except on "Unhappy Girl", "Horse Latitudes" and "When the Music's Over") [44] Paul Beaver – Moog synthesizer programming on ...
Printable version; In other projects ... Easy Ride (Doors song) ... The Ghost Song (Doors song) H. Hello, I Love You; Horse Latitudes (song) Hyacinth House;
The horse latitudes are a geographical area north and south of the equator. Horse Latitudes may also refer to: The Horse Latitudes, a 1997 album by the Promise Ring; Horse Latitudes, a 2011 album by Jeffrey Foucault; Horse Latitudes, a poetry collection by Paul Muldoon "Horse Latitudes", a song on the album Strange Days by the Doors
It should only contain pages that are The Doors songs or lists of The Doors songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Doors songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Like many of Muldoon's recent collections, Horse Latitudes contains a long poem – in this case a sonnet sequence ostensibly describing battle scenes through time and place. The collection also features several other characteristic features of Muldoon's work, such as fixed poetic forms and deft technique combined with a seemingly casual ...
The concert was recorded on July 5, 1968, at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles, the Doors' hometown. A VHS video of the concert was also released, containing 14 songs. The full version of the concert, entitled Live at the Bowl '68 , was released in October 2012 on CD, LP and Blu-ray Disc.
The Doors' producer and longtime collaborator Paul A. Rothchild claimed to have painstakingly edited the album from many different shows to create one cohesive concert. According to Rothchild, the best part of a song from one performance may have been spliced together with another part of the same song from another performance, in an attempt to ...
Writing for Allmusic, critic William Ruhlman wrote that "Singer/songwriter Jeffrey Foucault likes to play in a familiar, slow-moving country-folk style; this is a guy who has been to the desert on "A Horse with No Name," searching for a "Heart of Gold." The lyrical reflections he expresses so introspectively also tend to be spare and allusive...