The Lost Paris Tapes

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The Lost Paris Tapes
File:The Lost Paris Tapes (Jim Morrison bootleg album - cover art).jpg
Cover of a bootleg album of Jim Morrison's The Lost Paris Tapes.
Studio album by Jim Morrison
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Genre Spoken word

The Lost Paris Tapes is the title given to a recorded collection of unedited poems and songs by rock musician and poet Jim Morrison of The Doors. Although Morrison intentionally made the recordings, they are considered bootlegs because they were never officially released to the public in their unedited form by Morrison or his heirs.

The title of the collection is however a misnomer, because the bulk of the recordings were made in Los Angeles in February 1969; long before Morrison traveled to Paris. Morrison took these Los Angeles recordings with him to Paris,[1] where they were found among his belongings after his death.

Poetry recording session February 1969

According to engineer and producer John Haeny the spoken word part of the recordings were made at Elektra West Coast studios on February 9, 1969.[2]

The February 1969 recording session features a serious but relaxed Morrison taping spoken-word versions of his own written poetry. Morrison can be heard repeating certain sections of poems for technical or aesthetic reasons, and he can be heard giving occasional production cues, such as when certain sound effects should be added at a later date. Morrison's efforts to obtain clear recordings and his additional verbal directions suggest that he planned to use the recordings in a much more ambitious project that would merge his smoothly edited voice-overs with background sounds and music.[3]

Some of these recordings were later mixed with new music tracks recorded by surviving Doors members Ray Manzarek, Robby Krieger, and John Densmore, and released as the official Doors album An American Prayer. The February 1969 recording of "Orange County Suite" with Jim on piano was later used and mixed with new music recorded by the surviving Doors members Ray Manzarek, Robby Krieger, and John Densmore, and released as part of their 1997 4 CD "Box Set". This new Doors version also appears on the 1999 box set compilation CD Essential Rarities.

Previously it was believed the segment of the tape featuring an apparently drunken Morrison playing around in a studio with two equally inebriated "American street musicians" was recorded in Paris. Recently it has been revealed the recording session took place in the spring of 1969 during the recording of The Soft Parade. The people present at the recording were Morrison, poet Michael McClure on auto-harp, and a so-far unidentified musician. Paul Rothchild recorded the session and can be heard on the tape.[4]

Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek has referred to this recording as "drunken gibberish," observing, "If you haven't heard them, you're missing nothing."[5]

Once Morrison gave up trying to perform with the two musicians, he broke into a solo performance of "Orange County Suite." A writer for Rolling Stone magazine later called this piece "an astounding version of . . . [an] unfinished, unrealized paean to his old lady (Pamela Courson) that had been rejected from at least two Doors albums. . . . It was a drunken, and mostly ad-libbed, recording. Yet, listening carefully . . . , one hears the authentic last of Jim Morrison, two weeks before he died, as he roars spontaneous verses and imagery about his hard-hearted woman, his anguish and his obsessions, easily deploying a poetic champion's compositional facility for the natural cadence and spontaneous rhyme."[1] The segment was in fact recorded in Los Angeles and not in Paris as previously thought.

Morrison offhandedly labeled the resulting reel-to-reel tape of the session "Jomo and the Smoothies", Jomo being a pseudonym for Morrison.

The final pieces of spoken word were recorded almost two years later at Village Recorder Studio C, on December 8, 1970, which was Morrison's birthday.[2]

The bootleg also contains Earth, Air, Fire, Water, a poetry piece taken from Feast of Friends, a film produced by Paul Ferrara, Jim Morrison, and the Doors,[6] as well as Dawn's Highway and Phone Booth, both taken from HWY: An American Pastoral.

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Jim Morrison

March 1969 Poetry Session
No. Title Length
1. "Session Start"   1:06
2. "In That Year... [False Start]"   1:02
3. "In That Year..."   3:00
4. "Bird of Prey"   1:55
5. "Tape Noon"   2:22
6. "Whiskey, Mystics & Men"   3:38
7. "Orange County Suite"   5:34
8. "All Hail the American Night"   5:57
9. "The American Night"   0:34
10. "The Holy Shay"   0:37
11. "Hitler Poem"   0:44
12. "Can We Resolve the Past"   1:55
13. "Always a Playground Instructor"   1:32
14. "There's a Belief..."   0:25
15. "Indian, Indian..."   0:18
16. "Woman in the Window"   2:40
17. "She's Selling News..."   1:11
18. "Science of Night"   0:24
19. "Tales of the American Night"   0:36
20. "Now Listen to This"   0:46
21. "Babylon Fading"   0:39
22. "Thank You, O Lord"   0:35
Jomo & the Smoothies
No. Title Length
23. "Warm Up & Tuning"   4:30
24. "Starting Now!"   1:14
25. "Orange County Suite"   8:41
December 1970 Poetry Session
No. Title Length
26. "Graveyard Poem"   0:50
27. "The Politics of Ecstacy"   0:10
Feast of Friends
No. Title Length
28. "Earth, Air, Fire, Water"   0:53
HWY
No. Title Length
29. "Dawn's Highway"   3:57
30. "Phone Booth"   2:29

References

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  3. Jim Morrison, The Lost Paris Tapes, bootleg audio recording.
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External links