Jim Morrison Biography
JIM MORRISON
1943 - 1971
You could say it's an accident that I was ideally suited for the work I am
doing. It's the feeling of a bowstring being pulled back for 22 years and
suddenly being let go. I am primarily an American, second, a Californian, third,
a Los Angeles resident. I've always been attracted to ideas that were about
revolt against authority. I like ideas about the breaking away or overthrowing
of established order. I am interested in anything about revolt, disorder,
chaos—especially activity that seems to have no meaning. It seems to me to be
the road toward freedom—external revolt is a way to bring about internal
freedom. Rather than starting inside, I start outside—reach the mental through
the physical. I am a Sagittarian—if astrology has anything to do with it—the
Centaur—the Archer—the Hunt—But the main thing is that we are The Doors.
We are from the West. The whole thing is like an invitation to the West.
The sunset—This is the end
The night—The sea
The world we suggest is of a new wild west. A sensuous evil world. Strange and
haunting, the path of the sun, you know? Toward the end. At least for our first
album. We're all centered around the end of the zodiac. The Pacific—violence and
peace—the way between young and the old.
Whenever a hero has been born or passed
back into the void, the place is marked and sanctified. A temple is erected
there to signify and inspire the miracle of perfect centeredness; for this is
the place of the breakthrough. Someone at this point discovered eternity. The
site can serve, therefore, as a support for fruitful meditation. . . the shrine
or alter at the center being symbolical of the Inexhaustible Point. The one who
enters the temple and proceeds to the sanctuary is imitating the deeds of the
original hero.
"Though the favorites of the gods die
young, they also live eternally in the company of gods."
Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy
The Doors were somewhat of an anomaly in the rock pantheon. In their heyday they
weren't folk or jazz and while some rock critics called their music "acid rock"
they weren't part of the peace-and-love Airplane-Dead-Quicksilver acid-rock
sound of San Francisco. They had nothing in common with the English invasion, or
even pop music in general though they generated three Number 1 hit singles, and
while New York City was good to the Doors-almost to the point of adopting them
as their own-they were still a league apart from the Velvet Underground, despite
a mutual affinity for dark and somber themes. They weren't even part of the
folk-rock scene which dominated Los Angeles in those days, in the music of the
Byrds, Buffalo Springfield, and the like. Even among the hierarchy that includes
Elvis, Joplin, and Hendrix, they were a world unto themselves. " A strange and
haunting world," as Jim himself once said, "suggestive of a new and wild west."
To get the best view of Jim Morrison you must go through the Doors and the most
important thing to remember about the Doors is that they were a band and each
individual formed a side of the diamond that was the whole. One night, on the
road, just before the concert was to begin, a disc jockey climbed on the stage
to introduce the act: "Ladies and gentlemen, " he announced to the audience,
"please welcome Jim Morrison and the Doors!" There was the customary applause.
As the DJ walked down the stairs leading from the stage, Jim pulled him aside
and said, "Uh-uh, man, you go back up there and introduce us right." The DJ
panicked. "What did I say? What did I do? " "It's The Doors, " Jim said, "the
name of the band is The Doors."
Here was a band whose unexpressed goal was nothing short of musical alchemy-they
intended to wed rock music unlike any ever heard before with poetry and that
hybrid with theater and drama. They aimed to unite performer and audience by
plugging directly into the Universal Mind. They would settle for nothing less.
For them that meant risk, no gimmicks, nothing up their sleeves, no elaborate
staging or special effects-only naked, dangerous reality, piercing the veil of
maya with the music's ability to awaken man's own dormant and eternal powers.
The Doors constantly courted their muse-that is to say, Morrison courted his
muse, and the band followed; the band stayed with him. Jim believed one cannot
simply will the muse; the writer or artist's power lies in his ability to
receive, as well as invent, and it was the artist's duty to do everything
possible to increase his powers of reception. To achieve this end the
nineteenth-century poet Arthur Rimbaud had advocated a systematic "rational
derangement of all the senses." Why? "To achieve the unknown." How? Any way
possible.
Jim's fondness, and search, for the unknown is well documented in the following
pages. "There are things known," Jim would say in a quote often attributed to
William Blake but in fact Jim's own, "and there are things unknown, and in
between are the doors." But Blake did say, in his first Proverb of Hell, "The
road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom." And the next line down, "Prudence
is a rich ugly old maid courted by Incapacity." It needn't be added that Jim did
not court the maid and courted capacity whenever he could. Jim drank and yelled
and pleaded, cajoled and danced in inspiration to unite the band, to ignite the
audience, to set the night on fire, once and for all, forever.
Sadly, it was Jim's commitment to this standard, set so early in his
professional career, that finally did in both the man and the band. Jim Morrison
was a man who would not, could not, and refused to compromise himself or his
art. And herein lay his innocence and purity-his summary blessing and curse. To
go all the way or die trying. All or nothing. The ecstatic risk. Because he
would not manufacture or cheapen what he wrote, he could not fake despair or
pretend ecstasy. He would not merely entertain, or go through the motions; he
was brilliant and desperate, he was driven by an unrelenting need to "test the
bounds of reality," to probe the sacred, explore the profane. And it made him
mad...mad to create, mad to be real. And these qualities made him volatile,
dangerous and conflicted. He sought consolation and solace in the same elements
that had initially inspired him and helped him to create: intoxicants.
The French Surrealist Antonin Artaud's
theories regarding confrontation, as expounded in his thesis The Theater and
Its Double, were a significant influence on Jim and the group. In one of the
book's most powerful essays, Artaud draws a parallel between the plague and
theatrical action, maintaining that dramatic activity must be able to effect a
catharsis in the spectator in the same way that the plague purified mankind. The
goal? "So they will be terrified and awaken. I want to awaken them. They do not
realize they are already dead."
Jim would, in time, scream "Wake Up!" a thousand times, a thousand nights, in an
effort to shake the audience out of their unconsciousness. I can still remember
the first Doors concert I went to, scared to the very depth of my
thirteen-year-old soul, thinking: This guy is dangerous. Someone's gonna get
hurt, probably him. Or me. Or all of us. No one here gets out alive, he sang in
the song "Five To One" and when you confront that sort of fear-or the unholy
terror a song like "The End" can engender-something inside you shifts.
Confronting the end, eternity blinks. That concert changed my life. I knew: it
doesn't get any better or more real, than this. Today, more than twenty years
later I still feel the same way. I still don't know exactly what happened to me
that night back in 1967. But I know it was transcendent. Jim Morrison changed my
life. He changed Jerry Hopkins's life. He had power, he worked magic, Mr. Mojo
Risin'.
"Mystery festivals should be unforgettable events, casting their shadows over
the whole of one's future life, creating experiences that transform existence,"
Aristotle wrote. Doors concerts-Jim's performances, when successful,
accomplished such a transformation. Plutarch attempted to describe the process
of dying in terms of a similar initiation: "Wandering astray, down frightening
paths in darkness that lead nowhere; then immediately before the end of all
terrible things, panic and amazement." There are magical sounds and dances and
sacred words passed, and then "the initiate, set free and loose from all
bondage, walks about, celebrating the festival with other sacred and pure people
and he looks down on the uninitiated..."
Which comes damn close to describing the Doors at the peak of their powers:
Riding the snake, the serpent, ancient and archetypal, strange yet disturbingly
familiar, powerfully evocative, sensuous and evil, strong, forbidding. When
Morrison intoned, "The killer awoke before dawn and put his boots on/he took a
face from the ancient gallery/and he walked on down the hall," we were walking
down that hall with him, in dread, paralyzed, powerless to stop, as the music
wove a web of hysteria around us, wrapping us ever tighter in its web, Morrison
enacting the tragedy, the patricide, the horror, unspeakable torment. WE SAW IT,
WE FELT IT, we were there. We were hypnotized. Reality opened up its gaping maw
and swallowed us whole as we tumbled into another dimension. And Morrison was
the only guide: "And I'm right here, I'm going too, release control, we're
breaking through..." And then we did.
"Lost in a Roman wilderness of pain." It wasn't merely a line in a verse. It was
an epitaph for the moment, a photograph of the collective unconscious. The
symbols were timeless and the words contained stored-up images and energies
thousands of years old, now resurrected. Early in the group's career, Jim tried
to explain some of this to a journalist: "A Doors concert is a public meeting
called by us for a special dramatic discussion. When we perform, we're
participating in the creation of a world and we celebrate that with the crowd."
A few days before he flew to Paris, to his death, Jim gave to me what would be
his last statement to the press: "For me, it was never really an act, those
so-called performances. It was a life-and-death thing; an attempt to
communicate, to involve many people in a private world of thought."
It was the mid-to-late 1960s and bands were singing of love and peace and acid
was passed out, but with the Doors it was different. The emerald green night
world of Pan, god of music and panic, was never more resplendent than in the
Doors' music: the breathless gallop in "Not to Touch the Earth," the incipient
horror of "Celebration of the Lizard," the oedipal nightmare of "The End," the
cacophonous torment of "Horse Latitudes," and the dark, uneasy undertones of
"Can't See Your Face in My Mind," the weary impending doom of "Hyacinth House,"
the alluring loss of consciousness found in "Crystal Ship."
When the music was over, there was a stillness, a serenity, a connection with
life and a confirmation of existence. In showing us Hell, the Doors took us to
Heaven. In evoking death, they made us feel alive. By confronting us with
horror, we were freed to celebrate with them joy. By confirming our sense of
hopelessness and sorrow they led us to freedom. Or at least they tried.
An account of initiation into the mysteries of the goddess Isis survives in only
one in-person account, an ancient text that translated reads: "I approached the
frontier of death, I saw the threshold of Persephone, I journeyed through all
the elements and came back, I saw at midnight the sun, sparkling in white light,
I came close to the gods of the upper and the netherworld and adored them near
at hand. "
This all happened at night. With music and dance and performance. The concert as
ritual, as initiation. The spell cast. Extraordinary elements were loosed that
have resided in the ether for hundreds of thousands of years, dormant within us
all, requiring only an awakening.
Of course, psychedelic drugs as well as alcohol could encourage the unfolding of
events. A Greek musicologist gives his description of a Bacchic initiation as
catharsis: "This is the purpose of Bacchic initiation, that the depressive
anxiety of people, produced by their state of life, or some misfortune, be
cleared away through melodies and dances of the ritual."
There is a strange tantalizing fascination evoked by fragments of ancient pagan
mysteries: the darkness and the light, the agony and the ecstasy, the sacrifice
and bliss, the wine and the ear of grain (hallucinogenic fungi). For the
ancients it was enough to know there were doors to a secret dimension that might
open for those who earnestly sought them. Such hopes and needs have not gone
away with time. Jim Morrison knew this. Morrison was the first rock star I know
of to speak of the mythic implications and archetypal powers of rock 'n' roll,
about the ritualistic properties of the rock concert. For doing so, the press
called him a pretentious asshole: "Don't take yourself so seriously, Morrison,
it's just rock 'n' roll and you're just a rock singer."
Jim knew they were wrong, but he didn't argue. He also knew when the critics
insulted him they demeaned his audience. Jim knew that music is magic,
performance is worship, and he knew rhythm can set you free. Jim was too aware
of the historical relevance of rhythm and music in ritual for those transforming
Doors concerts to have been accidental.
From his favorite philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jim took solace and
encouragement in the admonition to "say yes to life." I never believed that Jim
was on a death trip as so many have claimed, and to this day still find it
difficult to judge the way he chose to live and die. Jim chose intensity over
longevity, to be, as Nietzsche said, "one who does not negate," who does not say
no, who dares to create himself.
Jim also must have been braced to read the following Nietzsche quote: "Saying
yes to life even in its strangest and hardest problems; the will to life
rejoicing over its own inexhaustibility even in the very sacrifice of its
highest types-this is what I call Dionysian, that is what I understood as the
bridge to the psychology of the tragic poet. Not in order to get rid of terror
and pity, not in order to purge oneself of a dangerous effect by its vehement
discharge, but in order to be oneself the eternal joy of becoming, beyond all
terror and pity. "It was Jim's insatiable thirst for life that killed him, not
any love of death.
. . . Nietzsche, Van Gogh, Rimbaud, Baudelaire, Poe, Blake, Artaud, Cocteau,
Nijinsky, Byron, Coleridge, Dylan Thomas, Brendan Behan, Jack Kerouac, the ones
who felt life too intensely to bear living it . . . the mad ones, the doomed
ones, the writers, poets, and painters, the artists stubbornly resistant to
authority and insistent on being loyal to their true nature, at any cost-this
was the lineage with whom Jim most passionately identified, and it was to their
standard he aspired. To be a poet, to be an artist, meant more than writing or
painting or singing; it meant having a vision and the courage to see that vision
through, despite any opposition. What didn't kill you made you stronger, and if
you had what it took, you were rare and wondrous, and if you didn't, it couldn't
be faked.
When Jim was asked by a fan mag how he
prepared for stardom he answered, "I stopped getting haircuts." What he didn't
say was, "and started dropping acid." Like so many many others, Jim took drugs
to expand his consciousness, to gain entry into worlds otherwise locked and
sealed off. Aware of a shaman's relationship to his inner-world via peyote, and
Castaneda's experiences with Don Juan, Jim ingested psychedelics. Like Coleridge
and the opium eaters, he was held spellbound by the artificial paradise, the
hypnagogic architecture, the milky seas and starless nights. As with Huxley, Jim
marveled before the splendiferous geometry and ancient secrets trembling on the
verge of revelation. And like the romantic poets, he reveled in the altering of
his senses with anything available-wine, hash, whiskey. If absinthe had been
around during his lifetime, Morrison would have been an absinthe drinker.
In The Varieties of Religious Experience, William James wrote what Jim
already knew: "Sobriety diminishes, discriminates, and says no; drunkenness
expands, unites, and says yes." And when the visions no longer pleased or
surprised him, when intoxication no longer provided him with the expansive
awareness he sought, as Dionysus, the god of ecstasy, became Bacchus, the
representative for drunkenness, Jim turned more and more to alcohol to numb the
pain and to revel in unconsciousness. At first he drank for the pure joy of it.
"I enjoy drinking," he admitted. "It loosens people up and stimulates
conversation. Somehow it's like gambling; you go out for a night of drinking,
and you don't know where you'll end up the next morning. It could be good, could
be a disaster, it's a throw of the dice. The difference between suicide and slow
capitulation."
And at the end he got drunk for the sad and simple reason that this is what
alcoholics do. To be a poet meant more than writing poems. To be a poet meant
making a commitment: to embrace the tragedy fate has chosen for you and fulfill
that destiny with gusto and nobility.
And now, twenty years after Jim's death, the Morrison/Doors story has blossomed
into the realm of myth. Jim's short tragic life is the stuff of which our heroes
and our gods of youth and resurrection are made. Like Orpheus, he is forever
young, and like Dionysus, he dies to be born again. And as with the murder of
Adonis, the sacrifice of Mithra, and the accidental death of Antinous, he could
not have lived without destroying the myth on which his audience has founded
itself. One of the main reasons Jim went to Paris was he could no longer live up
to the mythology he himself had helped create.
Because Jim Morrison didn't want to be a god. Jim Morrison wanted to be a poet.
Surely, no modern poet has written better of the alienation and feelings of
isolation, dread, and disconnectedness than Jim Morrison. We've been walled-in,
malled-in, insulated, air-conditioned, cine-plexed, programmed, brainwashed,
unalterably directed by materialism, consumerism, and capitalism, unaware of our
own heartbeats, only dimly aware of our diminished, starving spirits. Jim was
aware of this modem schism, this sense of dislocation, our angst: "If my poetry
aims to achieve anything, it's to deliver people from the limited ways in which
they see and feel."
When asked at a European press conference how he would describe the Doors'
music, a drunk and jet-lagged Jim described it like this" "The feeling I get is
a kind of heavy, sort of gloomy feeling, like of someone not quite sure about
anything...I'd like to do one just...um...of being totally at home."
Before freedom is achieved, before one arrives home first you must be lost,
wandering, devoid of hope; first you have to traverse the abyss. Before the dawn
by necessity comes the relentless night, what St. John of the Cross called "the
dark night of the soul" and Dante referred to as "the Dark wood." It is a
mandatory chapter of the hero's journey. And as Joseph Campbell has written,
it's this path the true artist must travel. Inching up to the abyss compelled
Rimbaud to write, "I have felt the wing of madness pass over me." Baudelaire
fought with the chilling and terrible winds emanating from the same depths when
he wrote, "The wind of fear has made my blood run cold."
In a poem titled simply "The Abyss," Baudelaire tries to describe the wordless
horror, the indifferent void. Sartre called this pit "No Exit." Jim sang, "Some
are born to sweet delight and some are born to the endless night" and there
could be little doubt from whence Jim had hailed. Morrison called to us his
sightings ("Out here on the perimeter there are no stars") and invited us to
join him ("is everybody in?") but we couldn't, and he couldn't wait. ("No
eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn.") And he wouldn't take
a step backwards or alter the destiny fate had chosen for him. Knowing the cost,
knowing the risks but driven by his insatiable thirst to see all, feel all, and
do everything, Jim ran up to the edge of that abyss and found a freedom so
complete and vast it was terrifying. And then he dove in.
I don't believe Jim's goal, his ambition, his ultimate destination was this dark
place. I think Jim wanted enlightenment. But Jim knew that the road of excess
leading to that palace of wisdom is fraught as much with despair and disaster as
with ecstasy and great joy. And that despair must not be suppressed but
experienced.
Jim's dying wish was to be taken seriously as a poet. While he was alive, his
behavior blinded many of us to his words. Today his life still fascinates and
amazes us, and his work as a poet is finally gaining the recognition it
deserves. Jim did what all good artists aim for and, when they are successful,
accomplish: to arouse us from the lethargy of our set ways and routine lives,
prick us into consciousness, provoke a reaction (whether positive or negative,
it matters not) within us; and to make us think. That in itself is a rare enough
occurrence so that we should be grateful indeed whenever we have the good
fortune to encounter it. Get ready, here he comes.
During his lifetime, Morrison had been compared to an angel and called the
devil, and almost everything in between. From Mephistopheles to the ultimate
Barbie doll, from the King of Acid Rock to Mickey Mouse de Sade. He was Dionysus
come to earth, a shaman in a foreign body. Rock star and poet. Genius and holy
fool. He amazed his audiences by giving all he had, more than they expected. And
then the audience grew in size as well as appetite, returned, demanding more.
Jim had grown larger than life and he tried to rise to the occasion and it
probably killed him.
Still, Jim got what he wanted. Jim wanted to be like a shooting star; now you
see him, now you don't, but for that brief moment he burns as the brightest star
in the galaxy. Yet at the same time, Jim wanted to transubstantiate the temporal
energy and light of life into the lasting immortality of art. What he hadn't
counted on was that the impact he made would last so long. I think he'd be
pleased. I think he'd be proud.
And in the end, after conquering America and the rest of the Western world,
after being shackled by the courts and laws of the land that he loved, and after
being ridiculed by the press, he escaped to Paris, home of so many expatriate
artists of the past, to further his life as a poet. But his body was too worn
down, his heart too weak; he had already seen and done and drunk too much. He
had lived life on his terms, he had reaped the rewards, and now the bill was
due. His spirit was tired. Death was simply closer and easier than returning to
America, or the stage it represented.
Jim Morrison is not dead. His spirit lives on, in his music and in these lyrics,
shining with incandescent brilliance, a fusion of light and dark made diamond
bright and eternal. "Cancel my subscription to the resurrection," he sang. Not
likely, Jim. This is not the end.