L.A. Woman (song)

Last updated
"L.A. Woman"
LA Woman Hand Lyrics The Doors.jpg
Morrison's handwritten original lyrics
Song by the Doors
from the album L.A. Woman
ReleasedApril 19, 1971 (1971-04-19)
RecordedDecember 1970 January 1971
Studio The Doors' Workshop, Los Angeles
Genre Blues rock [1]
Length7:49
Label Elektra
Songwriter(s) The Doors [2]
Producer(s)

"L.A. Woman" is a song by the American rock band the Doors. The song is the title track of their 1971 album L.A. Woman , the final album to feature Jim Morrison before his death on July 3, 1971. In 2014, LA Weekly named it the all-time best song written about the city of Los Angeles. [3]

Contents

In 1985, fourteen years after Morrison's death, Ray Manzarek directed, [4] and Rick Schmidlin produced a music video for the song. It was aired on MTV and included in the Doors film Dance on Fire . [5]

Band guitarist Robby Krieger has repeatedly cited "L.A. Woman" as the "quintessential Doors song". [6] [7] [8] It was labeled the 40th best classic-rock song by the New York radio station Q104.3. [9]

Lyrics

"L.A. Woman" has been viewed as Morrison's "final goodbye" to Los Angeles, before his move to Paris, France. [10] The song's lyrics draw inspiration from John Rechy's transgressive novel City of Night , published in 1963, [11] [12] while its title is expressed as a metaphor, personifying L.A. (Los Angeles) as a woman. [4] In author Melissa Ursula Dawn Goldsmith's description, it is also used to describe the city's topography and atmosphere. [13]

In the bridge, Morrison repeats the phrase "Mr. Mojo Risin'," which is an anagram of his name "Jim Morrison". [14] Doors drummer John Densmore later explained the story of the line:

After we recorded the song, he wrote "Mr. Mojo Rising" on a board and said, "Look at this." He moves the letters around and it was an anagram for his name. I knew that mojo was a sexual term from the blues, and that gave me the idea to go slow and dark with the tempo. It also gave me the idea to slowly speed it up like an orgasm. [15]

A yellow sheet of lined A4 paper with the lyrics of the track, handwritten by Morrison, was auctioned in Berkshire, UK for £13,000 on August 4, 2009. [16]

Personnel

The Doors

Additional musicians

Billy Idol version

"L.A. Woman"
Billy Idol L.A. Woman 1990 single cover.jpg
Single by Billy Idol
from the album Charmed Life
B-side "License to Thrill"
ReleasedJuly 23, 1990 [19]
Length
  • 5:29 (album version)
  • 3:58 (single edit)
Label Chrysalis
Songwriter(s) The Doors
Producer(s) Keith Forsey
Billy Idol singles chronology
"Cradle of Love"
(1990)
"L.A. Woman"
(1990)
"Prodigal Blues"
(1990)
"L.A. Woman" on YouTube

English singer Billy Idol recorded a version of "L.A. Woman" for his fourth studio album Charmed Life (1990). As the album's second single, Idol's version reached number 52 on the Billboard Hot 100 in October 1990. [20] The song's music video was directed by David Fincher and received heavy rotation on MTV. [21] [22]

The Doors and Jim Morrison were an influence on Idol during his early years in the music industry. [23] In a 1990 interview with the Associated Press, Idol commented on his interpretation of the song in comparison to the Doors' original, "Jim Morrison was singing about America or L.A. as a microcosm of an America he was very jaded with, really, to the extent that he left it go to Europe, whereas I'm the other way around. I'm still having a bit of a love affair with America and so it's exciting to be the 'lost angel'." [24]

Charts

Weekly chart performance for Billy Idol's cover
Chart (1990)Peak
position
Australia (ARIA) [25] 34
Canada Top Singles ( RPM ) [26] 40
Ireland (IRMA) [27] 28
Italy ( Musica e dischi ) [28] 17
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) [29] 25
UK Singles (OCC) [30] 70
US Billboard Hot 100 [31] 52
US Mainstream Rock ( Billboard ) [32] 18
US Radio Songs ( Billboard ) [33] 99
US Cash Box Top 100 Singles [34] 46

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References

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