Another thing about this song (and the entire album) is that the vast majority of it was recorded in August of 1966. Who else sounded like this at the time? Absolutely _nobody_ else. This was a brand-new and extremely unique sound. Much like their contemporaries The Who and Creedence Clearwater Revival, when you hear The Doors, you know it's them. Even as their albums changed in style from jazzy to bluesy to everywhere in between (and beyond), The Doors' unique sound remained entirely their own. It's a shame they didn't get the chance to make yet more music, because who knows where they would - or could - have gone. This album was groundbreaking in every sense of the term; as pivotal a '60s album as 'Pet Sounds' or 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', in my humble opinion.
@@Sadpotatoirl2010 I never got into the VU, but I understand the album's importance all the same. Floyd's debut is great (Astronomy Domine is amazing). The Grateful Dead released their debut in 1967 also, but it barely scratched the surface of the greatness to come. So many great singles and albums came out in 1967. The same thing could be said for '68 and '69. And - seemingly a world away in Jamaica - Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer were making some of the greatest music they'd ever make from 1967-1970.
Actually Sean Bonniwell and The Music Machine were Jim's biggest influence as he was always attending their shows at Whiskey A-Go-Go before The Doors became a thing.
It's so nice to see someone fully appreciate Jim's uniquely beautiful voice. The Crystal Ship is my favorite Door's song. I really enjoyed the analysis! Thanks 😊
Jim Morrison's voice is surely one of the most special voices I´ve ever heard in my entire life and I´m a music lover who has been studying and listening to different kinds of music since I was 10 years old and I´m close to 40. He has a darkness and depth, but at the same time he caresses you, has aggression, envelops you. He can imbue you with the party spirit in an elegant way like on “Break On Through”, he can intoxicate you with a lysergic darkness like on “Not to Touch the Earth” or “When the Music is Over”, or take a space of contemporary music history and write in stone songs like “The End” or “Riders on the Storm”. There are so many nuances when you've been listening to The Doors for so many years...I've always thought that this song contains a very powerful message in an apparently simple lyric, but difficult to write. Something similar to “Yes, the River Knows” but for me “The Crystal Ship” is better. Anyway, to express so much with so little you must have Jimbo's talent. Ray, Robby and John are the perfect frame and quality in which to frame such an inimitable personality. Very nice analysis.
I like to listen to "been down so long". Because if you are a singer and try to get into a state of relaxation, this is the best. Crystal ship isn't bad for this either. I mean, Jim is putting out some forceful vocals but it sounds so relaxed. That song in particular taught me alot about singing. The pivotal moment there is "warden, warden, wardeeeen !. It's like trying to sound drunk almost but the technique works for all kinds of singing. Except maybe mongolian throat singing ?
The “Crystal Ship” can be seen as a symbol of transcendence, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness. The lyrics also touch on the pain of separation, the desire for one more moment of intimacy, and the longing for freedom and adventure.
I always thought it represented a hypodermic needle being filled with crystal meth of course back then it was called p2p or phenol2propaline but it was clearly a crystal. I think both interpretations have an obvious overlap especially considering the pro-drug zietgest of the era. Think about the song mony mony and how it was about heroin. I don't buy the revisionist history that says it wasn't.
If you notice the chords that play right before every defining word when Jim sings "the days are BRIGHT and filled with PAIN, ENCLOSE me in your GENTLE rain" you'll notice they match them perfectly.
I just realised I've been watching your reaction with a big and joyful smile on my face. ❤ Jim's voice is really unique and lyric for ''The Crystal Ship'' is absolutely captivating.
@@PatJenningsGloves He really was. I had the pleasure of seeing him perform with poet, Michael McClure, in a very small auditorium in Santa Barbara, followed by a long Q&A session. It was just a wonderful, fascinating evening and Ray was awesome both on the keys and off.
Back in the early eighties there was a sudden revival in Doors music from people that weren't familiar with them beforehand, so much so, that Rolling Stone Magazine put Jim Morrison on a issue cover with the tag line, "JIM MORRISON - HE'S HOT, HE'S SEXY AND HE'S DEAD". There was so much FM air play of Doors music during this time period that it was nearly impossible not to have heard their complete catalog at one time or another. Also, there was a Cover Band that went by the name Crystal Ship that played at all the clubs in the area.
OMG...so happy I just found your channel! I sang this song a while back and so many people loved my version. I love Jim's voice and this song...and I love your channel...thank you!!! 💗💗💗
I got tired of hearing Light my Fire & The End . This is a magical debut album, ❤ this song Ray Manzarek was a genius organ musician who played bass on keyboards, piano & organ.He used the Bass pedals to give the deep sounds
Without doubt their most beautiful song and one of my favorites. Bought this, my first album, when it was first released. I was 10, approximately a million years ago
Anytime I hear The Doors, it always reminds me of Joe Hayes. As a middle schooler, he used to hang out with my older sister who was already in High School. He was always the nicest to me and would ask if I wanted to watch Apocalypse Now with him because of the opening song to the movie, The End. My God, Joe was amazing, and he was taken away from us before he could even see his 50's. RIP Joe. We love you brother.
Lazy is a perfect way to describe Morrison's vocal style. One of the great poets of the 20th century. And he had the ability to relay the emotion in his words as a vocalist/performer as well. Genius.
My older teenaged brother bought and played this album over and over when I was just 10 years old. I didn't realize at the time what a blessing it was to be immersed in music of such quality.
Wow! When you said the title I too thought that I'd never heard this song before... but once it started it took me back to high school. Thanks for this!
This is such a great song! The Doors were among the most controversial & influential rock acts of the 1960s, mostly due to Jim Morrison's lyrics & voice. "Riders On The Storm" is my favorite song by them but they had a lot of hits including "Roadhouse Blues", "Light My Fire", "Break On Through (To The Other Side)", "Love Me Two Times", "L.A. Woman", "Hello, I Love You", "Touch Me", "The Unknown Soldier", "Love Her Madly", "The End" etc. Sadly Jim Morrison died in 1971 at the age of only 27 but left a great legacy of music
It took me a while to realize how good a singer this guy was his natural tone/timbre is very pleasing to the ear, although he was a singer by accident in the beginning I suspect he became aware of technique & relaxed delivery pretty quickly even if by intuition not instruction.
The song you thought of was "This is Dedicated to the One I Love" by the Mamas & the Papas! I love the Doors. If you get the chance, Bethany, check out "Peace Frog" off of Morrison Hotel. Great reaction, as always.
... never get bored absorbing your reviews. I find the album "The Doors" by The Doors recorded in mid-1966 so advanced for its time. At that time not a lot of bands could push the artistic envelope differently (of course immediately comes to mind is The Beatles and perhaps Simon and Garfunkel). Great review.
In 1967, I was a freshman in high school and I'd listen to this on the flip side of the 45, "Light My Fire.," late in evening on very low volume in my room. It became my favorite Doors song and preferred it to the A side, LMF. Much more presence, reflective and subjectively moving then the A side that still resonates as a 71 year old soul. Thank you very much for critiquing this. "The crystal ship is being filled A thousand girls, a thousand thrills A million ways to spend your time When we get back, I'll drop a line."
Great review,I have always loved this son cause it shows Morrison's versitility as a singer.......he usually screams,and nobody scream sings better but here he's so soft & tender,it's just fantastic! Your correct about how he sings,alot of the time he leaves out hard consonanets when he's singing and the words almost run together,but it works so well!
It's amazing I was 13 years old, living in México city and this was the number one song that I love from the doors. Light my fire, roadhouse blues and gloria were the most popular songs from the doors in México city but for me it was this song in particular. Now there is so many others since The Doors is my second favorite rock band of all times.
The Crystal Ship (like The End) was written by Jim Morrison, about the breakup with his great love (along with Pamela Courson), a girl from Florida named Mary Werbelow.
I remember the summer day in 1977 listening to a special program about The Doors on the radio. I was entranced and excited to tell my brothers of my discovery.
jim had pipes for sure, but his voice was so rich, just a richness he could just call up whenever needed, for any kind of singing the song required...almost, he wasnt paul mccartney, but there was already a paul mccartney
Morrison was a crooner in the tradition of Sinatra, who he could have heard at home in the '50s like most teenagers thanks to his parents. I believe he states somewhere that he liked Sinatra, whose precise diction he matches. Morrison wants people to hear the words of his texts. But it's more than that: his voice like Sinatra's is supple and agile and can convey the most fleeting emotions, even in the softer tones and lowered volumes. There are about a dozen songs of The Doors that I would qualify as "soft" (as opposed to "hard," bluesy, roadhouse songs)--songs like "Crystal Ship" and "Love Street" and "Hyacinth House" and others. His alcoholism--or whatever caused it--was one of the greatest losses to American popular music.
Sinatra, however, was not a fan of The Doors. There's a story that when "Light My Fire" was released in 1967 Sinatra heard the song while he was driving and promptly kicked the car's radio in disgust.
Initially when i first started listening to the Doors in the late 60's this song wasn't on my top Doors song list, but all these decades later it's become my favorite from them.
Wow! With this band and this song meaning so much to me...still now but even moreso when I was younger, it's so satisfying to see someone with a musical background being so taken with it and picking up on all the wonderful nuances found within. Thank you for your thoughtfulness and enthusiasm. They make for a very refreshing review! Take a listen to Wishful Sinful at some point. There are a few years between the recording of these songs but I feel like they go together well.
Ray Manzanerk's composition for the intro of Light My Fire was a masterpiece and of course he just shot up from there! In my opinion, back in the late 60s and 70s, the Doors was a very talented band that ended way too soon due to Jim's leaving to Paris. The Crystal Ship has always been one of my favorites from them and I thank you for doing this take.
You definitely need to hear “The End”. It’s a long one but amazing and is on Rolling Stone Magazine’s top 500 songs of all time. It’s complex and very dramatic and The Doors were ahead of their time with this song. People were up in arms over it at the time and there was nobody else doing anything like it. They had a sound all their own and nobody else was as artistic and fearless as they were at that time.
Love Love Love The Doors I love their lesser known songs Soul Kitchen, Texas radio and the back beat, The Changeling. Thanks for showcasing this song 💜 Mama's and the Papa's, Dedicated to the one I love!
Jim spent a good chunk of his formative years in Alexandria, Virginia, and with that in mind you can hear the drawl in his singing; it flavors certain words, it was part of Jim’s natural vocal effect. Then again, I was in a relationship with a singer from that area, so I’m a bit more attuned to it. But I can hear it all over the doors music, and in this song.
It would be so cool if you could do a video about the absolutely iconic Simon and Garfunkel performance of Bridge Over Trouble Water in Central Park 1981 :) Art Garfunkel definitely delivered one of the best vocal performances ever!!
I went to the Whiskey a gogo every night when the Doors were performing, booked with Love, was a very kind and gentle person, soft-spoken, stunning charisma. I cherish those days, this was the beginning of the groundbreaking music scene on the Strip.
One of my favorite Doors’ songs. I have a soft spot for more low-key yet substantial ballads like this. Some rock groups don’t have it in them to write this kind of tune. And that’s fine if their style doesn’t allow any room for balladry. But I personally enjoy it when bands can tone it down yet keep things moving. And I find that much easier to sing.
I have had the privilege of being able to go to Jim's grave in Paris. As a lifelong Doors fan, it was truly amazing to see the love he still gets with the flowers and other gifts. Really cool
The amazing thing with this song is like hours of the rising sun by the animals the driving force is the ride cymbal. What I also love about Taylor Manzerick is that he lets the keyboard/ piano drive the bass line and the bass guitar just flutter in and out.
The Doors always struck me as a band that would have been great at creating film scores, if desired. They had such a great appreciation for film in general and so easily borrowed from the motifs of other composers.
Different to most rock- and blues songs I know is the usage of a (jazz) Bb major 7 chord in this song that generates (in my ears at least) a sloping unique and dense mixture of darkness, sadness as well as gentleness, softness. A kind of musical mourning about a brocken love and understanding and accepting the rules behind it - cool!
I love Jim Morrison, that voice and how tells the stories of all the songs. I have no idea how many times i have listened to "An American Prayer" Recorded Posthumous by the Door where they took a fair bit of his poems and set Music too them. Instantly thought about it when he started sining on this song, ikt is pretty much the style he mostly sing/talks on the "prayer" album. .ust a brilliant album well worth your time someday.
If you were ... uh... slightly inebriated or, uh... in a smoke-filled haze... his voice was Hypnotic and oh-so-calming. Leaned back on that ancient, POS couch in college, black lights making those great posters glow, and just closing your eyes. It was beautiful, man. Just beautiful .
I love this song. It gives me such a Frank Sinatra "It was a very good year" kind of vibe. It's just wonderful. Both Jim and Frank held their own way in such a smooth presence.
Jim was awesome 27 was far too young to die for a man with his talents ,i guess we were lucky to get as much of him as we did but will always wonder what his next chapter would have been .
Thanks Bethany for reacting my favorite Doors song, I wasn't expecting anyone to react to this one. Also, thanks for the recent Brel reaction. May I suggest Scott Walker as future reaction material, mainly his late 60's era (Scott I to IV): not only he covered a bunch of Brel songs, but he was such a delicate and talented singer. Every of his song is so well crafted. I'd suggest "Montague terrace (in blue)", "Always coming back to you" or "Rosemary" as starter.
When I first listened to this I simply absorbed it as a beautiful musical experience. But a few years later I worked out a keyboard arrangement & discovered a fascinating feature that my less analytical listen-&-enjoy-it ears had missed consciously (though there was a bit of subliminal awareness). The song has four verses, split by Ray's gorgeous solo between the 2nd & 3rd. But both melodically and harmonically, and even a bit structurally, no two verses are quite identical. Pretty much the opposite of what most pop/rock bands try to do with their AABA (etc.) formats.
Bethany,you can see Jim was primarily a Beat Poet in a Rock band but he also was aware of the absurdity of life and the futility of striving for this and that only to surrender it all in death.A revolving door for sure.
Jim Morrison was more than a musician and singer. He was a poet. So sad that so many of these amazing artists left us too soon. This is a very psychedelic vibe.
Another thing about this song (and the entire album) is that the vast majority of it was recorded in August of 1966. Who else sounded like this at the time? Absolutely _nobody_ else. This was a brand-new and extremely unique sound. Much like their contemporaries The Who and Creedence Clearwater Revival, when you hear The Doors, you know it's them. Even as their albums changed in style from jazzy to bluesy to everywhere in between (and beyond), The Doors' unique sound remained entirely their own. It's a shame they didn't get the chance to make yet more music, because who knows where they would - or could - have gone. This album was groundbreaking in every sense of the term; as pivotal a '60s album as 'Pet Sounds' or 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', in my humble opinion.
This album is uniquie in it's own, like VU banana album. I love Pink Floyd debut album too. 1967 is scarily good times.
@@Sadpotatoirl2010 I never got into the VU, but I understand the album's importance all the same. Floyd's debut is great (Astronomy Domine is amazing). The Grateful Dead released their debut in 1967 also, but it barely scratched the surface of the greatness to come. So many great singles and albums came out in 1967. The same thing could be said for '68 and '69. And - seemingly a world away in Jamaica - Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer were making some of the greatest music they'd ever make from 1967-1970.
@@johnr.8275 just addition: The Doors literally dropped their first two albums in that year, wow!
Closest thing close to this album that preceded it was the band Love. Love kind of opened the door for them, so to speak ;)
Actually Sean Bonniwell and The Music Machine were Jim's biggest influence as he was always attending their shows at Whiskey A-Go-Go before The Doors became a thing.
The Crystal Ship is a masterpiece. The combination of Jim's voice with Ray's keyboards is dreamy.
This was an anthem in my early teenage youth and my questions about growing up with it’s confusing finality could find a happy solace in it’s melody.
I never thought anyone would react/analyze this gem. What a pleasant surprise on a Monday morning. Thank you. *Blue Sunday* is another slow burn.
She'll flip out on that one if she ever does it.
Altho I love energetic songs from them - he shines on the slower ballads like this- a unique band and a unique voice..
How true a statement. Who's mind would this one ever enter these days? Yet so worthy.
As a lifelong Doors fan, I've often wondered why this song isn't better known.
True listeners know!
One of my true favorites, I even got my grandmother to love it back in the 70s.
Yeah definitely one of my favorite Doors songs
everybody knows they hid the GOOD STUFF halfway thru the B side of the album....
The whole album is a classic .
Never dreamed Somebody would react to this awesome
It's so nice to see someone fully appreciate Jim's uniquely beautiful voice. The Crystal Ship is my favorite Door's song.
I really enjoyed the analysis! Thanks 😊
Jim was a huge Sinatra fan, and used the same mic Sinatra used. His influence is evident here.
I did not know that, but now that you mention it, you can sure see it in his style.
The Doors at their dreamiest and most psychedelic.
Jim Morrison's voice is surely one of the most special voices I´ve ever heard in my entire life and I´m a music lover who has been studying and listening to different kinds of music since I was 10 years old and I´m close to 40. He has a darkness and depth, but at the same time he caresses you, has aggression, envelops you. He can imbue you with the party spirit in an elegant way like on “Break On Through”, he can intoxicate you with a lysergic darkness like on “Not to Touch the Earth” or “When the Music is Over”, or take a space of contemporary music history and write in stone songs like “The End” or “Riders on the Storm”.
There are so many nuances when you've been listening to The Doors for so many years...I've always thought that this song contains a very powerful message in an apparently simple lyric, but difficult to write. Something similar to “Yes, the River Knows” but for me “The Crystal Ship” is better. Anyway, to express so much with so little you must have Jimbo's talent. Ray, Robby and John are the perfect frame and quality in which to frame such an inimitable personality. Very nice analysis.
Jim's voice was so sexy, when I'd sing along with him, I'd get laid, too.
I like to listen to "been down so long". Because if you are a singer and try to get into a state of relaxation, this is the best. Crystal ship isn't bad for this either. I mean, Jim is putting out some forceful vocals but it sounds so relaxed. That song in particular taught me alot about singing. The pivotal moment there is "warden, warden, wardeeeen !. It's like trying to sound drunk almost but the technique works for all kinds of singing. Except maybe mongolian throat singing ?
Just such beautiful, thoughtful and precise composition of thoughts and words.
The “Crystal Ship” can be seen as a symbol of transcendence, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness. The lyrics also touch on the pain of separation, the desire for one more moment of intimacy, and the longing for freedom and adventure.
I always thought it represented a hypodermic needle being filled with crystal meth of course back then it was called p2p or phenol2propaline but it was clearly a crystal. I think both interpretations have an obvious overlap especially considering the pro-drug zietgest of the era. Think about the song mony mony and how it was about heroin. I don't buy the revisionist history that says it wasn't.
Actually it's a representation of 'heaven' from mythology.
"Another flashing chance at bliss" 🥰
This song is such a great poem. Definitely one of my favorite Doors songs.
If you notice the chords that play right before every defining word when Jim sings "the days are BRIGHT and filled with PAIN, ENCLOSE me in your GENTLE rain" you'll notice they match them perfectly.
I just realised I've been watching your reaction with a big and joyful smile on my face. ❤ Jim's voice is really unique and lyric for ''The Crystal Ship'' is absolutely captivating.
Jim Morrison. The Doors. Totally Unique !! R I P Jim and Ray.
At least Robbie and John are still around!
Jim added poetry to rock
“Refinement” what a beautiful, apt way to describe this song from The Doors. Thanks for the breakdown on this gem. 🙌🏼
Love your gentle reaction :) Thank you for lightening up my monday morning!!
Ray Manzarek is in the pantheon of great rock keyboard players. He was a maestro and a gentleman. Thank you for this insightful analysis.
He was a wonderful storyteller ❤
Ray was the glue. I love Jim, but it couldn't have happened without Ray. His creative transitions were seamless and moody.
@@PatJenningsGloves He really was. I had the pleasure of seeing him perform with poet, Michael McClure, in a very small auditorium in Santa Barbara, followed by a long Q&A session. It was just a wonderful, fascinating evening and Ray was awesome both on the keys and off.
@@johnplaysgames3120 Wow what a treat, I would love to have seen that.
Back in the early eighties there was a sudden revival in Doors music from people that weren't familiar with them beforehand, so much so, that Rolling Stone Magazine put Jim Morrison on a issue cover with the tag line, "JIM MORRISON - HE'S HOT, HE'S SEXY AND HE'S DEAD".
There was so much FM air play of Doors music during this time period that it was nearly impossible not to have heard their complete catalog at one time or another. Also, there was a Cover Band that went by the name Crystal Ship that played at all the clubs in the area.
OMG...so happy I just found your channel! I sang this song a while back and so many people loved my version. I love Jim's voice and this song...and I love your channel...thank you!!! 💗💗💗
I got tired of hearing Light my Fire & The End . This is a magical debut album, ❤ this song
Ray Manzarek was a genius organ musician who played bass on keyboards, piano & organ.He used the Bass pedals to give the deep sounds
I had a 45 of this as a kid. I absolutely wore it out. Love this song! Thank you for the reaction!
Without doubt their most beautiful song and one of my favorites. Bought this, my first album, when it was first released. I was 10, approximately a million years ago
Anytime I hear The Doors, it always reminds me of Joe Hayes. As a middle schooler, he used to hang out with my older sister who was already in High School. He was always the nicest to me and would ask if I wanted to watch Apocalypse Now with him because of the opening song to the movie, The End. My God, Joe was amazing, and he was taken away from us before he could even see his 50's. RIP Joe. We love you brother.
This song, to me, is a GEM!!! This is just ONE of my favorite Doors tunes!! LOVE his VOCALS in this one!!
This is now my favorite song because I just fell in love with Bethany.
Lazy is a perfect way to describe Morrison's vocal style. One of the great poets of the 20th century. And he had the ability to relay the emotion in his words as a vocalist/performer as well. Genius.
My older teenaged brother bought and played this album over and over when I was just 10 years old. I didn't realize at the time what a blessing it was to be immersed in music of such quality.
This one has long been a favorite of mine. I rarely see it mentioned. Thanks for the reaction and insights Bethany!
Totally agree about his voice. He's always had, in my opinion, one of the nicest tones ever.
It a very unique song. I really love the occasional haunting chord changes, during the tune …. Awesome!
Always my favorite Doors song! Loving your channel!
Wow! When you said the title I too thought that I'd never heard this song before... but once it started it took me back to high school. Thanks for this!
This is such a great song! The Doors were among the most controversial & influential rock acts of the 1960s, mostly due to Jim Morrison's lyrics & voice. "Riders On The Storm" is my favorite song by them but they had a lot of hits including "Roadhouse Blues", "Light My Fire", "Break On Through (To The Other Side)", "Love Me Two Times", "L.A. Woman", "Hello, I Love You", "Touch Me", "The Unknown Soldier", "Love Her Madly", "The End" etc. Sadly Jim Morrison died in 1971 at the age of only 27 but left a great legacy of music
It took me a while to realize how good a singer this guy was his natural tone/timbre is very pleasing to the ear, although he was a singer by accident in the beginning I suspect he became aware of technique & relaxed delivery pretty quickly even if by intuition not instruction.
Great reaction---I have always loved this song. It is a masterpiece.Thanks!
Pure Magic... most beautiful song of my life!
This short little one may be my fav Doors tune. Truly a mood I'd like to live inside more often.
The song you thought of was "This is Dedicated to the One I Love" by the Mamas & the Papas! I love the Doors. If you get the chance, Bethany, check out "Peace Frog" off of Morrison Hotel. Great reaction, as always.
I love peace frog. The guitar riff gets me right at the start.
A masterpiece I NEVER thought I'd ever hear reacted to. Thank you!
I love this song. Love your breakdown. Thank you! 😊
"Dedicated to the one I love" is the song you were thinking about, by the Mamas and the Papas.
... never get bored absorbing your reviews. I find the album "The Doors" by The Doors recorded in mid-1966 so advanced for its time. At that time not a lot of bands could push the artistic envelope differently (of course immediately comes to mind is The Beatles and perhaps Simon and Garfunkel). Great review.
"Another kiss... Another flashing chance..." at The Doors.😊 My favorite band. Thank you for this reaction and hello from Serbia 🇷🇸.
In 1967, I was a freshman in high school and I'd listen to this on the flip side of the 45, "Light My Fire.," late in evening on very low volume in my room. It became my favorite Doors song and preferred it to the A side, LMF. Much more presence, reflective and subjectively moving then the A side that still resonates as a 71 year old soul. Thank you very much for critiquing this.
"The crystal ship is being filled
A thousand girls, a thousand thrills
A million ways to spend your time
When we get back, I'll drop a line."
Great review,I have always loved this son cause it shows Morrison's versitility as a singer.......he usually screams,and nobody scream sings better but here he's so soft & tender,it's just fantastic! Your correct about how he sings,alot of the time he leaves out hard consonanets when he's singing and the words almost run together,but it works so well!
Good God, it's such a beautiful piece.
My favourite Doors song! So good!
Thank you!!! You're reactions are priceless. Cheers.
I could listen to you listen to the Doors all day. 😘
It's amazing I was 13 years old, living in México city and this was the number one song that I love from the doors.
Light my fire, roadhouse blues and gloria were the most popular songs from the doors in México city but for me it was this song in particular.
Now there is so many others since The Doors is my second favorite rock band of all times.
The Crystal Ship (like The End) was written by Jim Morrison, about the breakup with his great love (along with Pamela Courson), a girl from Florida named Mary Werbelow.
I remember the summer day in 1977 listening to a special program about The Doors on the radio. I was entranced and excited to tell my brothers of my discovery.
Ottime osservazioni. Brava, continua così.
Un saluto da Napoli, Italia.
This was my favorite song on their first album
You always give us such a fresh, refreshing view on the songs you review. Keep it up! This is a great example of a relatively unknown gem.
there is a jazzy snappiness to it with the drums...but other than that its super mellow & relaxing but somehow epic too:) great reaction
yeah i sas gonna say dream, (kinda cliche) but *underwater* dreaminess is an awesome description:)
jim had pipes for sure, but his voice was so rich, just a richness he could just call up whenever needed, for any kind of singing the song required...almost, he wasnt paul mccartney, but there was already a paul mccartney
Thanks for doing this song.
Morrison was a crooner in the tradition of Sinatra, who he could have heard at home in the '50s like most teenagers thanks to his parents. I believe he states somewhere that he liked Sinatra, whose precise diction he matches. Morrison wants people to hear the words of his texts. But it's more than that: his voice like Sinatra's is supple and agile and can convey the most fleeting emotions, even in the softer tones and lowered volumes. There are about a dozen songs of The Doors that I would qualify as "soft" (as opposed to "hard," bluesy, roadhouse songs)--songs like "Crystal Ship" and "Love Street" and "Hyacinth House" and others. His alcoholism--or whatever caused it--was one of the greatest losses to American popular music.
Sinatra, however, was not a fan of The Doors. There's a story that when "Light My Fire" was released in 1967 Sinatra heard the song while he was driving and promptly kicked the car's radio in disgust.
@@rb9628Sinatra was probably feigning disgust to cover up jealousy and fear that Jim's voice was, at least, as good as his.
Initially when i first started listening to the Doors in the late 60's this song wasn't on my top Doors song list, but all these decades later it's become my favorite from them.
Wow! With this band and this song meaning so much to me...still now but even moreso when I was younger, it's so satisfying to see someone with a musical background being so taken with it and picking up on all the wonderful nuances found within. Thank you for your thoughtfulness and enthusiasm. They make for a very refreshing review!
Take a listen to Wishful Sinful at some point. There are a few years between the recording of these songs but I feel like they go together well.
Ray Manzanerk's composition for the intro of Light My Fire was a masterpiece and of course he just shot up from there! In my opinion, back in the late 60s and 70s, the Doors was a very talented band that ended way too soon due to Jim's leaving to Paris. The Crystal Ship has always been one of my favorites from them and I thank you for doing this take.
You definitely need to hear “The End”. It’s a long one but amazing and is on Rolling Stone Magazine’s top 500 songs of all time. It’s complex and very dramatic and The Doors were ahead of their time with this song. People were up in arms over it at the time and there was nobody else doing anything like it. They had a sound all their own and nobody else was as artistic and fearless as they were at that time.
Love Love Love The Doors
I love their lesser known songs
Soul Kitchen, Texas radio and the back beat, The Changeling.
Thanks for showcasing this song 💜
Mama's and the Papa's, Dedicated to the one I love!
Jim spent a good chunk of his formative years in Alexandria, Virginia, and with that in mind you can hear the drawl in his singing; it flavors certain words, it was part of Jim’s natural vocal effect.
Then again, I was in a relationship with a singer from that area, so I’m a bit more attuned to it. But I can hear it all over the doors music, and in this song.
Fla too… his father was born in ga… he had a southern slight tone in his voice, agree. Came out even more in his singing.
It would be so cool if you could do a video about the absolutely iconic Simon and Garfunkel performance of Bridge Over Trouble Water in Central Park 1981 :)
Art Garfunkel definitely delivered one of the best vocal performances ever!!
I went to the Whiskey a gogo every night when the Doors were performing, booked with Love, was a very kind and gentle person, soft-spoken, stunning charisma. I cherish those days, this was the beginning of the groundbreaking music scene on the Strip.
My favorite Doors song❤ Jim Morrison ❤
One of my favorite Doors’ songs. I have a soft spot for more low-key yet substantial ballads like this. Some rock groups don’t have it in them to write this kind of tune. And that’s fine if their style doesn’t allow any room for balladry. But I personally enjoy it when bands can tone it down yet keep things moving. And I find that much easier to sing.
I have had the privilege of being able to go to Jim's grave in Paris. As a lifelong Doors fan, it was truly amazing to see the love he still gets with the flowers and other gifts. Really cool
When Jim and I wrote that song we really leaned on each other to persuade others to follow along.
The amazing thing with this song is like hours of the rising sun by the animals the driving force is the ride cymbal. What I also love about Taylor Manzerick is that he lets the keyboard/ piano drive the bass line and the bass guitar just flutter in and out.
Chose this song to be played at my brother's funeral. Indian Summer and Cars hiss by my window are two Doors songs that have similar vibe.
The Doors always struck me as a band that would have been great at creating film scores, if desired. They had such a great appreciation for film in general and so easily borrowed from the motifs of other composers.
Always enjoy your reactions, very much ! 🙏🙏🙏
Different to most rock- and blues songs I know is the usage of a (jazz) Bb major 7 chord in this song that generates (in my ears at least) a sloping unique and dense mixture of darkness, sadness as well as gentleness, softness. A kind of musical mourning about a brocken love and understanding and accepting the rules behind it - cool!
I love Jim Morrison, that voice and how tells the stories of all the songs.
I have no idea how many times i have listened to "An American Prayer" Recorded Posthumous by the Door where they took a fair bit of his poems and set Music too them. Instantly thought about it when he started sining on this song, ikt is pretty much the style he mostly sing/talks on the "prayer" album. .ust a brilliant album well worth your time someday.
I was born in the 70’s. The Doors still were on the air a lot back then. I have loved the doors since I was a toddler.
A beautiful song shared with a beautiful woman. Thank you so much.
If you were ... uh... slightly inebriated or, uh... in a smoke-filled haze... his voice was Hypnotic and oh-so-calming. Leaned back on that ancient, POS couch in college, black lights making those great posters glow, and just closing your eyes. It was beautiful, man. Just beautiful .
More of the doors, please 🙏
I love this song. It gives me such a Frank Sinatra "It was a very good year" kind of vibe. It's just wonderful. Both Jim and Frank held their own way in such a smooth presence.
That first intro of notes sounded like Dedicated to the one I love by The Mamas and the Papas.
I love the way you fell the music.
Love the Doors, just wished you could've done a live version and react to the way he sang. He definitely had a way when he sang. Great reaction!! ❤
"Each night before you go to bed, my baby"
Dedicated to the One I Love, Mamas & The Papas
Forty plus years ago my sister in law had an apartment two minutes walk from 'Jims' final resting place a beautiful old Paris cemetery!!...
Enclose me in your gentle rain. Pure poetry. You probably saw Ray in the Ed Sullivan show performance of Light My Fire. I remember that show.
Jim was awesome 27 was far too young to die for a man with his talents ,i guess we were lucky to get as much of him as we did but will always wonder what his next chapter would have been .
It's my favourite song from Doors, thank you
just another great Doors piece.
Thanks Bethany for reacting my favorite Doors song, I wasn't expecting anyone to react to this one. Also, thanks for the recent Brel reaction. May I suggest Scott Walker as future reaction material, mainly his late 60's era (Scott I to IV): not only he covered a bunch of Brel songs, but he was such a delicate and talented singer. Every of his song is so well crafted. I'd suggest "Montague terrace (in blue)", "Always coming back to you" or "Rosemary" as starter.
Their first album. Poetry. Jim's shyness I think impacts his vocal style too. Great tune
I LOVE Manzarek's work in Riders On The Storm!! SO GOOD!
When I first listened to this I simply absorbed it as a beautiful musical experience. But a few years later I worked out a keyboard arrangement & discovered a fascinating feature that my less analytical listen-&-enjoy-it ears had missed consciously (though there was a bit of subliminal awareness). The song has four verses, split by Ray's gorgeous solo between the 2nd & 3rd. But both melodically and harmonically, and even a bit structurally, no two verses are quite identical. Pretty much the opposite of what most pop/rock bands try to do with their AABA (etc.) formats.
You had a great poker face for the first minute or so, couldnt tell if you were into this song or not. So glad you enjoyed it.
Bethany,you can see Jim was primarily a Beat Poet in a Rock band but he also was aware of the absurdity of life and the futility of striving for this and that only to surrender it all in death.A revolving door for sure.
Jim Morrison was more than a musician and singer. He was a poet. So sad that so many of these amazing artists left us too soon. This is a very psychedelic vibe.