Ray Manzarek - The Golden Scarab (Reissue) (1974/1992) Lossless
BAND/ARTIST: Ray Manzarek
- Title: The Golden Scarab
- Year Of Release: 1974/1992
- Label: Mercury
- Genre: Blues Rock, Jazz Rock
- Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
- Total Time: 01:01:57
- Total Size: 439 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. He Can't Come Today 4:40
2. Solar Boat 5:58
3. Downbound Train 5:30
4. The Golden Scarab 6:45
5. The Purpose of Existence Is? 6:38
6. The Moorish Idol 5:37
7. Choose Up And Choose Off 4:43
8. Oh Thou Precious Nectar Filled Form (or) A Little Fart 5:00
9. Whirling Dervish 5:20
10. I Wake Up Screaming 3:35
11. Bicentennial Blues 7:56
More than Full Circle and Other Voices, The Golden Scarab is the best embodiment of the Doors by one of the three surviving members, and it is amazing it wasn't a huge underground smash. With mentions of moonlight drives tightrope rides, titles of past Doors tunes in "The Solar Boat," drummer Tony Williams, guitarist Larry Carlton, bassist Jerry Scheff, and producer Bruce Botnick generate an eerie sound behind the singer, creating a title track as mysterious and fun as anything by Morrison and company. With intense rhythms and tons of creativity, Ray Manzarek brings us on a musical journey as unique as The Phantom's Divine Comedy, and if Robbie Krieger brought the commercial element to the Doors' gravy train, it is clear here that the eldest of the quartet had more a hand in the development of the Doors persona than he may have been given credit for. One can't fault Robby Krieger and John Densmore for stretching out with Butts Band, but there is a certain responsibility hit artists should have to their audience. The Bright Midnight releases finally address those concerns, but decades before the opening of the Doors tape vaults, that sound from L.A. Woman was most obvious on "The Purpose Of Existence Is? on this solo effort. Yes, Ray Manzarek veers off into his jazz leanings; given the players on this, how could he not? But he gives enough of a taste of past glories to make The Golden Scarab accessible, spoon feeding his musical styles to those who couldn't get enough of the music he was associated with. It's dramatic and cohesive, making more sense than Jim Morrison much of the time, with more controlled insanity. It is amazing that such a fine work as The Golden Scarab escaped the masses, and shameful that classic hits stations don't add this to their incessant repertoire. Had Jim Morrison lived, this is the path the music of the Doors should have taken. Smooth and demanding of repeated spins.
Blues | Oldies | Rock | FLAC / APE
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