John Densmore and Robby Krieger of the Doors discuss the band's 60th anniversary and the group's ongoing series of archival ...
The 60th anniversary of The Doors is to be celebrated with a career-spanning studio box set, a live album and an anthology.
Both Krieger and Densmore believe that the Doors’ debut album from 1967 and their fast, loose last record with Jim Morrison, 1971’s “L.A. Woman,” were their band’s finest recordings.
Hugh McIntyre covers music, with a focus on the global charts. The Doors haven’t put out an album of original material since the 1970s, but that hasn’t stopped them from returning to the ...
“Instead of writing ‘Light My Fire,’ I should’ve written ‘Don’t Light My Fire,’” he says. Both Krieger and Densmore believe that the Doors’ debut album from 1967 and their fast, loose last record with ...
The new live recording from The Doors performs best on the Top Rock Albums chart, arriving at No. 20. It marks their first top 20 title, as their previous best performer, Paris Blues, stalled at No.