Legacy: The Absolute Best
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Break on Through (To the Other Side)
- Back Door Man
- Light My Fire
- Twentieth Century Fox
- Crystal Ship
- Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar)
- Soul Kitchen
- End
- Love Me Two Times
- People Are Strange
- When the Music's Over
- My Eyes Have Seen You
- Moonlight Drive
- Strange Days
- Hello, I Love You
- The Unknown Soldier
- Spanish Caravan
- Five to One
- Not to Touch the Earth
Disc 2:
- Touch Me
- Wild Child
- Tell All the People
- Wishful Sinful
- Roadhouse Blues
- Waiting for the Sun
- You Make Me Real
- Peace Frog
- Love Her Madly
- L.A. Woman
- Riders on the Storm
- WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)
- Changeling
- Gloria [Live]
- Celebration of the Lizard [#]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #51521 in Music
- Released on: 2003-08-12
- Number of discs: 2
- Format: Original recording remastered
- Dimensions: .29 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Packed with over 2 1/2 hours of groundbreaking and career-spanning cuts, all remastered for stellar sound. Features the previously unreleased studio version of 'Celebration Of The Lizard'. Slipcase. Elektra/Rhino. 2003.
Customer Reviews
Latest "Best Of" Is Not For Everyone
There's a lot of kvetching going on among my fellow reviewers. Most of the 1- to 3-star reviews complain about yet another repackaging of Doors material, but that shouldn't detract from the contents. The thirty-four tracks [which are all full-length album versions] are presented chronologically from their six studio albums, plus "Gloria" from 1983's ALIVE SHE CRIED and the previously unissued 17-minute studio version of "Celebration of the Lizard." In short, this is a terrific compilation--and finally, a "best of" which features the ENTIRE band on the cover! [Running time: disc one, 79:24; disc two, 76:25] HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Definitive? Well, Pretty Inclusive...
I don't know about "definitive", but this is the most comprehensive "unboxed" Doors collection to date. (The original "Doors Box Set", in my opinion, contains much filler and substandard performances, and is for diehards and completists only.) This 2-disc collection contains all their chart hits (seven top 40 singles, including two #1's) and most of their better album tracks, including the two epics, "The End" and "When the Music's Over". Generally, the track choices are on the money, although I would have liked to see the title track of "The Soft Parade" included. Also, I have mixed feelings about "Celebration of the Lizard", a lengthy unreleased work which contains the original version of "Not to Touch the Earth", and has more archival than musical value. If you have no Doors in your CD library yet, however, this is the best collection out there.
Almost Ideal
I have no idea how many Doors "greatest hits" collections have been issued over the years, but this is as good as it's likely to get without simply buying all six albums.
The previous "Best of the Doors" was 2-cd set but was a transfer from a two-LP set and didn't take advantage of the longer CD running time, each disc running under 45 mins. This set not only includes all the Doors' most popular songs but puts them in chronological order, and adds the live track "Gloria" and the previously unissued studio version of "The Celebration of the Lizard."
"Lizard" is a curio item that seems to have been tacked on to force people like me (who already own all the Doors albums) to buy this one too. While "Lizard" is a great poem, the line about "a different steeple" being a notable exception, most of the music doesn't work that well, except for "Not to Touch the Earth." The live versions of "Lizard" are equally frustrating, running hot and cold but never having quite the impact the Doors were shooting for. This is clearly still a work in progress; perhaps if the Doors had continued to perform it they would have found a solid groove for it. (Ray Manzarek has said that he was never competely satisfied with live performances of "The End", either; but at least they nailed the studio version.)
IMPORTANT: Both "The End" and "Break on Through" include minor alterations from their original versions. There is some different vocalization by Jim on both songs, some of which you hear on the version of "The End" that was used in the film "Apocalypse Now." There's nothing inherently wrong with offering these alternative mixes but it does detract from the collection's claim to be definitive.
*This compilation has been deleted and replaced by yet another two-disc set, with some different songs.*




