He began to berate the audience and would stop songs midway to wander about the stage and instigate those in attendance. He eventually went as far as to try and expose himself to the audience. Though more than ten thousand people were in attendance, it has never been confirmed if Morrison succeeded in exposing himself that night. But what really cemented Morrison’s defiance and view as a rebel hero happened just two years earlier when The Doors performed “Light my Fire” live on The Ed Sullivan Show. Because of the prominent drug reference, Morrison had agreed early on to change the lyric "girl we couldn't get much higher.” However when the cameras rolled he carried on and sang it anyway. Thus resulting in The Doors being banned from the show for life. That being said Morrison provided much of the rebelliousness that The Doors let loose. Other bands at the time, for instance The Beatles, Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, were trying spread the massage of hope and peace. While The Doors on the other hand were making music that looked at notions of hedonism, violence, as well as revolt and chaos. Through Jim Morrison’s poems and song lyrics, The Doors embodied the rebellious discontent of the 1960’s. Many of Morrison’s lyrics imply his generation’s vexation with the principals of American life at the time. This became apparent in the late sixties with America’s involvement in Vietnam. It was at this time that Morrison composed his most political writings. His analytical …show more content…
To jot down notes, poems and artistic doodles. () And it was from within the pages of Morrison’s notebooks that most of The Doors’ songs stemmed from. In fact a majority of the The Doors’ songs were originally conceived as poems in Morrison’s notebooks. As the band’s popularity skyrocketed, and the demand for material escalated, they would turn to Morrison’s notebooks for many lyrics, complete compositions and poetic fragments to adapt into longer songs. Morrison continued to write and experiment with his poetry even up to his death. While in paris just two weeks before his death, Morrison rented song studio time to record some of his verses. In the surviving tape one hears the haunting last recording of Jim Morrison. He roared spontaneous verses and imagery about his woman, his anguish and his obsessions. In the tape a drunken Morrison mostly ad-libbs over the music played by two strangers he met on the streets of paris. Jim Morrison was a creative, rebellious, poet who became one of the most iconic and influential rock frontmen in music history. His lyrics and poetry emphasized the significance