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  2. Touch Me (The Doors song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touch_Me_(The_Doors_song)

    "Touch Me" is a song by the Doors from their 1969 album The Soft Parade. Written by guitarist Robby Krieger in late 1968, it makes extensive use of brass and string instruments, including a solo by featured saxophonist Curtis Amy .

  3. The Soft Parade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Soft_Parade

    Touch Me" (penned under the working titles "Hit Me" and "I'm Gonna Love You") was chosen as the first single taken from The Soft Parade, becoming one of the Doors' biggest hits. The band brought in the saxophone player Curtis Amy to perform a solo instrumental on the song, which was influenced by the works of John Coltrane .

  4. Jim Morrison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Morrison

    The book The Doors, by the remaining Doors, quotes Morrison's close friend Frank Lisciandro as saying that too many people took a remark of Morrison's that he was interested in revolt, disorder, and chaos "to mean that he was an anarchist, a revolutionary, or, worse yet, a nihilist. Hardly anyone noticed that Jim was paraphrasing Rimbaud and ...

  5. Live in Hollywood: Highlights from the Aquarius Theater ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_in_Hollywood:...

    Live in Hollywood: Highlights from the Aquarius Theater Performances is a compilation live album released by the band the Doors, live in Hollywood. The album was released in 2001 by the label of Bright Midnight Archives. Is the first of five albums released by the Doors of the live recordings in the Aquarius Theatre. [1]

  6. Live at the Aquarius Theatre: The Second Performance

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_at_the_Aquarius...

    Live at the Aquarius Theater: The Second Performance is a double live album of the band the Doors, released as a double CD recorded live at the Aquarius Theatre in Hollywood on 21 July 1969. This album is one of the live performances at Aquarius Theatre by the label of the Bright Midnight Archives .

  7. Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 (The Doors album)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_at_the_Isle_of_Wight...

    The DVD/Blu-Ray Disc of the concert includes This is the End a 18-minute film containing interviews with Doors' guitarist Robby Krieger, drummer John Densmore, concert director Murray Lerner, and original Doors manager Bill Siddons. A 2002 interview recorded with Ray Manzarek, the Doors keyboardist who died in 2013, is also included. [9]

  8. Absolutely Live (The Doors album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolutely_Live_(The_Doors...

    According to the biography No One Here Gets Out Alive, Morrison hated the album cover for Absolutely Live.He had changed his appearance dramatically since the band's early days, growing a beard and discarding his onstage leather attire in an attempt to overcome his "rock god" image, but was dismayed to find that his record label opted for an earlier photograph of him for the cover.

  9. C'mon Marianne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C'mon_Marianne

    The song sported a riff which The Doors also appropriated in their 1968 single "Touch Me". In the following year, 1968, the song was covered by Grapefruit, a London-based group headed by Glaswegian George Alexander (b. Alexander Young), who was the older brother of George Young (from The Easybeats) and of Malcolm and Angus Young of AC/DC.