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| Waiting for the Sun | |||||
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| Studio album by The Doors | |||||
| Released | July 11, 1968 (Vinyl LP) 1992 (Gold CD) |
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| Recorded | Dec. 1967–May 1968 | ||||
| Genre | Acid rock, blues-rock, hard rock, psychedelic rock | ||||
| Length | 32:59 | ||||
| Label | Elektra / Asylum Records | ||||
| Producer | Paul Rothchild | ||||
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| The Doors chronology | |||||
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Waiting for the Sun is The Doors' third studio album. It was released in 1968 and became the band's first and only number one album and spawned their second number one single, "Hello, I Love You." With the exception of two songs, the material for this album was written after the band's initial songs from the formation of the group had been recorded for their debut album and second album, Strange Days. The highlight of this album was supposed to be the lengthy theatrical piece "Celebration of the Lizard", but in the end only the "Not to Touch the Earth" section was used. Critics have argued that the Doors suffered from "the third album syndrome," meaning that by the time they had to make this album, their creativity was very limited.
The song "Waiting for the Sun" would not appear on an album until Morrison Hotel.
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Structure
The track "Celebration of the Lizard" was intended to take up an entire album side, but the group was never able to get it right (they would revisit it later in its full-length form on their 1970 album Absolutely Live). Many fans have suggested once "Celebration of the Lizard" was shelved, 2 of the Doors earliest tracks were resurrected and re-recorded for use to fill in the void, such tracks being "Hello I Love You" and "Summer's Almost Gone". These two tracks had been recorded in an earlier arrangement for The Doors original 1965 demo. The album still ended up as the shortest studio album by the band.
"Celebration of the Lizard" and two early takes of "Not to Touch the Earth" were included as bonus tracks on the 40th anniversary expanded edition release of this album.
Though a strong album lyrically, musically it has often been criticized for its softer, mellow sound, a departure from the edgier, more ambitious sound that the band had become well-known (and notorious) for. Nonetheless, the album contains some rarely disputed classics, most notably the menacing "Five to One", the controversial anti-war anthem "The Unknown Soldier", and the evocative "Not to Touch the Earth".
Curiously enough, the title track "Waiting for the Sun" was left off this album, but would be included on the 1970 album Morrison Hotel.
This album marked keyboardist Ray Manzarek's transition from Vox Continental organ to Gibson G101, the organ he is best known for playing live.
Track listing
All songs written by The Doors (John Densmore, Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek and Jim Morrison).
- "Hello, I Love You" – 2:14
- "Love Street" – 2:53
- "Not to Touch the Earth" – 3:56
- "Summer's Almost Gone" – 3:22
- "Wintertime Love" – 1:54
- "The Unknown Soldier" – 3:25
- "Spanish Caravan" – 3:03
- "My Wild Love" – 3:01
- "We Could Be So Good Together" – 2:26
- "Yes, the River Knows" – 2:36
- "Five to One" – 4:26
40th Anniversay Edition CD bonus tracks
- "Albinoni's Adagio in G minor" – 4:32
- "Not to Touch the Earth" (Dialogue) – 0:38
- "Not to Touch the Earth" (Take 1) – 4:05
- "Not to Touch the Earth" (Take 2) – 4:18
- "Celebration of The Lizard" (An Experiment/Work in Progress) – 17:09
Chart positions
| Year | Chart | Position |
|---|---|---|
| 1968 | Billboard Pop Albums (Billboard 200) | 1 |
Personnel
- Jim Morrison – lead vocals
- Robby Krieger – lead guitar, rhythm guitar
- Ray Manzarek – organ, piano, bass
- John Densmore – drums
External links
| Preceded by Wheels of Fire by Cream |
Billboard 200 number-one album September 7 - September 27, 1968 October 5 - October 11, 1968 |
Succeeded by Time Peace: The Rascals' Greatest Hits by The Rascals |
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Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 8 November 2008, at 12:38.
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