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THE
LOST INTERVIEW TAPES FEATURING JIM MORRISON VOLUME ONE
Each Interview Has Been Mastered From The Best Available Surviving
Source. Please Note, However, That The 1967 Oswego Interview Contains
Several Audio Anomalies (As Can Be Heard At The Start Of The 'The
Ed Sullivan Show' Excerpt Below) Which Are Inherent In The Original
Recording.
An Excerpt From Danny Sugerman's Notes:
When The Doors were hard at work on 'L.A. Woman' they received an
inquiry from a Toronto based writer who worked with the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation. Most interviews were denied at this point in time, especially
if there wasn't anything new to talk about, like a new album hitting
the stores. But this person, Tony Thomas, wanted to talk intelligently
about something other than The Doors and Jim's icon status. He wanted
to talk about Jim's poetry and the upcoming publication of 'The Lords
And The New Creatures', Jim's first published poetry book, of which
he was so proud.
In May 1970, Jim Morrison sat and talked with Tony Thomas at The Doors
West Hollywood office. The interview was reportedly aired as a brief
news excerpt, but the interview in its entirety has never broadcast
or published. Also included is one of The Doors earliest radio interviews.
Booked to play a gig at the University Of New York at Oswego in upstate
New York, the band agreed with Elektra's East Coast Radio Promotion
Man to do an interview to promote their debut album. Just prior to
showtime, backstage, in walks an interviewer, carrying a small reel-to-reel
tape recorder on loan from the University's Audio/Visual Department.
Confronted by what Manzarek today recalls as "a short, sophomoronic,
chubby geek", the band was clearly disappointed by what they learned
to be true reason for the interview - that it was to be broadcast
only on a local radio station with "a range of approximately thirty
yards", to quote Manzarek again, and about as many watts, that the
radio station prohibited the broadcast of rock 'n' roll, and, finally,
that this guy only had an interview show that was to feature "locals
and guests". Hence, this interview, seen, or rather heard, in this
context, makes the material more revealing for what it doesn't contain
than what it does. Which is not to say the interview is not entertaining.
Far from it.
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