The last album by The Doors to have Jim Morrison appear was L.A. Woman. Released in 1971, the album is a bluesy affair with songs like the John Lee Hooker cover, “Crawling King Snake” plus the originals “Cars Hiss By My Window” and “Been Down So Long”. “The Wasp (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)” takes that sound in a slightly more experimental direction led by the stomping beat of John Densmore and the organ of Ray Manzerek.
First track “The Changeling” really gets things moving with a funky bass line. The band wanted it as a single and it really should have been, instead it appears on the B-side to “Riders On The Storm”. “Hyacinth House” opens with a solid guitar riff from Robby Krieger as Morrison later sings, “I need a brand new friend who doesn’t bother me”. It’s an all together lighter affair, compared to the darker elements of the album. The single “Lover Her Madly” was one of the band’s highest charting US singles, it is played with joy – a bit of a tambourine and an organ that breaks through midway through.
At almost eight minutes, the title track plays like a jam with Morrison really shining with evocative lyrics, a goodbye to the city he would soon leave. “Well, I just got into town about an hour ago…Just another lost angel/City of night…Drive through your suburbs/Into your blues…Cops in cars, the topless bars/Never saw a woman so alone… Mr. Mojo Risin” to name just a few. An FM radio album track staple for years to come.
The album finally closes with another moody classic, “Riders On The Storm”. The rainfall sounds mixing with lyrics about a killer hitchhiker oozes the underbelly of the era. A chugging bassline with jazzy psychedelic Rhodes piano as Morrison tells a woman that “you gotta love your man” and to “Take him by the hand/Make him understand”. More sinister than loving, it was the last song that all four members would appear on before the untimely death of Morrison on July 3, 1971. After a couple of critically middling albums, the original version of The Doors went out with two classics with Morrison Hotel and L.A. Woman, regaining the greatness first heard on the debut.
9/10




