other titles...

the DOORS

Live at Konserthuset, Stockholm, September 20, 1968 (RSD 24)

Record Store Day 2024 - Translucent Light Blue 3LP - £68.99
Record Store Day 2024 - 2CD - £17.99
Previously unissued live radio broadcast from September 20, 1968.
the DOORS

Alive, She Cried (2024 Repress)

limited 140g transparent emerald green lp - £29.99 | Buy
The second official live album by the American rock band, the Doors, released in October 1983 by Elektra Records.
the DOORS

Live from Bakersfield (Black Friday 2023)

Limited 140g 2LP - £43.99
The Doors Live in Bakersfield is one of the more unique shows from The Doors during a tumultuous 1970 when Jim Morrison was on trial on trumped-up charges in Mi...
the DOORS

Live At The Matrix 1967: The Original Masters

3cd - £21.99 | Buy
The set features soon-to-be beloved covers by The Doors such as “Gloria” and blues favorites like “Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)” that would...
the DOORS

L.A. Woman (2022 reissue)

180g lp in die-cut jacket - £37.99 | Buy
this is the 50th anniversary remaster of the classic sixth studio album by the doors.
Strange Days (reissue)
  1. “Strange Days”
  2. “You’re Lost Little Girl”
  3. “Love Me Two Times”
  4. “Unhappy Girl”
  5. “Horse Latitudes”
  6. “Moonlight Drive”
  7. “People Are Strange”
  8. “My Eyes Have Seen You”
  9. “I Can’t See Your Face In My Mind”
  10. “When The Music’s Over”

the DOORS

Strange Days (reissue)

RHINO
  • 180g 'stereo version' lp

    Released: 15th Mar 2010

    £22.99
    Buy

to celebrate its 50th anniversary, this version features the mono mix by the album’s original engineer Bruce Botnick.

***the other cd includes the original stereo mix of the album on CD for the first time in a decade, with sound that’s been remastered for the first time in 30 years. the album’s original mono mix has been remastered for this set & is making its CD debut. Accompanying the set are liner notes, as well as a selection of rare & previously unseen photographs.*** Having a larger budget allowed the band to spend more time experimenting in the studio. They used an eight-track recorder for the first time, which resulted in some memorable overdubs like Krieger’s double-tracked guitar on “When The Music’s Over.” Surprisingly, the trippy keyboard sound heard on the album’s title track is actually one of the earliest appearances of a Moog synthesizer in a rock song.