Yes, they were. Like most bands of the time, they didn't even play their instruments on their first album. Most new bands in the Laurel Canyon scene in the 60s did vocals only on their first albums because they just weren't very good musicians and had The Wrecking Crew, famous studio musicians, play the music uncredited.
The Doors were a live band on Sunset Blvd before their first album, and most people who remember them say they were terrible. But they didn't have to be good because their audience was extremely high and not very discerning. When you play for a room of acid heads, no one is going to notice that your music sucks.
Morrison was supposed to be a great poet, although he had never written anything prior to being in the band. He gets the idea to front a band and suddenly he has polished, sophisticated song lyrics for the band to put music to. Amazing! That's GOT to be true, and it's definitely not because US intelligence provided material and musicians for the band.
> Yeah, c'mon I love my girl She lookin' good C'mon One more
> Five to one, baby
> One in five
> No one here gets out alive, now
> You get yours, baby
> I'll get mine
> Gonna make it, baby If we try
What's the ratio being referenced here? You think this song is about people vs the state, but the people outnumber public officials far greater than 5:1 ratio. Maybe I'm wrong, but 5 to 1 doesn't sound like the correct ratio of common citizens to politicians or whatever.
> The old get old
> And the young get stronger
> May take a week
> And it may take longer
> They got the guns
> But we got the numbers
> Gonna win, yeah
> We're takin' over
> Come on!
This seems like the song is about dems vs republicans in a local area. "They got guns but" implies the other side doesn't, "we got numbers" implies they are a larger movement 5x the size. If I had to guess, this is a reference to the political divide in California.
> Your ballroom days are over, baby
> Night is drawing near
> Shadows of the evening
> Crawl across the years
"Ballroom days" likely is a reference to a more classical time when music was sophisticated and formal. Makes sense for the 1960s.
> Ya walk across the floor with a flower in your hand
> Trying to tell me no one understands
Idk what this part means
> Trade in your hours for a handful of dimes
> Gonna' make it, baby, in our prime
Probably sarcastically complaining about low wages or the spread of drugs "dimes"
> Come together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together, aha
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together, got to, get together
One more time? That was ten lol typical shitty pop music.
> Hey, c'mon, honey
> You won't have a long wait for me, baby
> I'll be there in just a little while
> You see, I gotta go out in this car with these people and
Revelation of the method, here he is admitting his obligation to "these people".
> Get together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together, got to
> Get together, got to
> Get together, got to
> Take you up in my room and
> Hah-hah-hah-hah-hah
> Love my girl
> She looking good, looking real good
> Love you, come on
Dude can't not sing about sex in any one song.
Anyways, I don't think that scared any proponents of the state, a proponent of the state probably wrote it.
The Doors were a live band on Sunset Blvd before their first album, and most people who remember them say they were terrible. But they didn't have to be good because their audience was extremely high and not very discerning. When you play for a room of acid heads, no one is going to notice that your music sucks.
Morrison was supposed to be a great poet, although he had never written anything prior to being in the band. He gets the idea to front a band and suddenly he has polished, sophisticated song lyrics for the band to put music to. Amazing! That's GOT to be true, and it's definitely not because US intelligence provided material and musicians for the band.
> Yeah, c'mon I love my girl She lookin' good C'mon One more
> Five to one, baby
> One in five
> No one here gets out alive, now
> You get yours, baby
> I'll get mine
> Gonna make it, baby If we try
What's the ratio being referenced here? You think this song is about people vs the state, but the people outnumber public officials far greater than 5:1 ratio. Maybe I'm wrong, but 5 to 1 doesn't sound like the correct ratio of common citizens to politicians or whatever.
> The old get old
> And the young get stronger
> May take a week
> And it may take longer
> They got the guns
> But we got the numbers
> Gonna win, yeah
> We're takin' over
> Come on!
This seems like the song is about dems vs republicans in a local area. "They got guns but" implies the other side doesn't, "we got numbers" implies they are a larger movement 5x the size. If I had to guess, this is a reference to the political divide in California.
> Your ballroom days are over, baby
> Night is drawing near
> Shadows of the evening
> Crawl across the years
"Ballroom days" likely is a reference to a more classical time when music was sophisticated and formal. Makes sense for the 1960s.
> Ya walk across the floor with a flower in your hand
> Trying to tell me no one understands
Idk what this part means
> Trade in your hours for a handful of dimes
> Gonna' make it, baby, in our prime
Probably sarcastically complaining about low wages or the spread of drugs "dimes"
> Come together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together, aha
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together one more time!
> Get together, got to, get together
One more time? That was ten lol typical shitty pop music.
> Hey, c'mon, honey
> You won't have a long wait for me, baby
> I'll be there in just a little while
> You see, I gotta go out in this car with these people and
Revelation of the method, here he is admitting his obligation to "these people".
> Get together one more time
> Get together one more time
> Get together, got to
> Get together, got to
> Get together, got to
> Take you up in my room and
> Hah-hah-hah-hah-hah
> Love my girl
> She looking good, looking real good
> Love you, come on
Dude can't not sing about sex in any one song.
Anyways, I don't think that scared any proponents of the state, a proponent of the state probably wrote it.