-40%
1970 THE DOORS LONG BEACH CONCERT TICKET STUB JIM MORRISON GRAM PARSON THE END J
$ 205.91
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Description
YOU ARE BIDDING ON ANORIGINAL
THE DOORS
CONCERT TICKET STUB
WITH OPENING ACTS
ALBERT KING
THE FLYING BURRITO BROTHERS
FROM FEBUARY 7, 1970
AT THE LONG BEACH ARENA
IN LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA
I HAVE INCLUDED A SAMPLE PICTURE OF THE CONCERT HANDBILL IN MY DESCRIPTION PICTURES. IT IS
NOT INCLUDED
IN THE AUCTION, IT'S JUST USED TO HELP WITH THE ITEM DESCRIPTION
Setlist:
Roadhouse Blues
Alabama Song
Back Door Man
Five To One
Ship Of Fools
When The Music's Over
-
We Got Books To Read
The Spy
Break On Through
Peace Frog
Blue Sunday
Universal Mind
Petition The Lord With Prayer
Light My Fire
-
Fever
-
Summertime
Soul Kitchen
Love Me Two Times
Maggie M'Gill
Carol
The Crystal Ship
Touch Me
The End
REVIEW OF THE SHOW
Newspaper: The Long Beach Independent
Author:
Preston Reese
Publish Date:
February 9th - 1970
The Doors, musically, were somewhat a jar
By Preston Reese
By the time the Doors’ Jim Morrison mounted the Long Beach Arena’s stage Saturday, his audience of 12,000 teenyboppers had already had their young heads blown hither and yon by a series of uppers and downers from the other groups.
The Doors, a hard-rock group, first came into attention three years ago with their hit record “Light My Fire.” More recently the group was publicized when its lead singer, Jim Morrison, was arrested for “lewd and lascivious behavior” during a Florida concert.
The concert opened with The Flying Burrito Brothers, a group of ex-Byrd members who offered their usual mediocre country-western sampling.
Albert King’s hour-long set followed and brought the audience up with doses of blues-rock, but brought them right back down again when he switched to “heavy” blues, featuring “You’re So Mean To Me.”
King’s technically excellent band had its own cheering squad in what seemed to have been a 90 percent Doors-fan audience, which showed little response to the harsh, beatless type of blues with which he closed his set. The same empty mood prevailed through most of the Doors’ part of the concert, too.
Morrison was in terrible voice, plodding through most of his songs with no attempt at styling or building climaxes.
Although he prodded the audience several times with, “turn out the light!” at the top of his voice during “When the Music’s Over,” he couldn’t seem to recapture this old Morrison style, which at one time took very little trying, which was part of the style itself.
Robby Krieger’s guitar carried a half-hour version of “Light My Fire,” with tight transitions into “Summertime” and various improvised songs by Morrison, who threw in a choppy harmonica solo, which didn’t help the song any, although he was boosted by half the audience, which lighted matches.
Morrison’s repertoire included all the “big ones”… applause-getters which proved themselves years ago, such as, “Soul Kitchen” and “Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar).”
He introduced a couple of new songs which didn’t fare too well, along with “I’m a Spy” and “Gloria,” the latter having hinted the concert might improve after all, but soon it was 11:30 pm, the concert was about to close, and after “When the Music’s Over,” the house lights were up.
Morrison asked: “Does anybody have to be home early?… Turn those lights off, man.” And then he really got into it, with “Love Me Two Times.”
In answering shouts from the audience requesting “Crystal Ship” and “Touch Me,” Morrison asked the audience to decide by applause which one they wanted to hear. “Crystal Ship” won… and bombed.
After the first few lines, Morrison stopped the song when he and guitarist Krieger couldn’t get together.
He did a great job of “Touch Me,” however, and after a minor scrap between he and an audience member, closed the concert at 1 am with “The End.” It was about time.
THE TICKET STUB SHOW WEAR, BUT WOULD LOOK AWESOME
FRAMED WITH PHOTOS OR OTHER MEMORABILIA.
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