Quick Facts
Date:
c. 1967 - c. 1972
Related People:
Jim Morrison

the Doors, American band that, with a string of hits in the late 1960s and early ’70s, channeled the dark undercurrents of the era’s counterculture with such songs as “The End,” “Light My Fire,” and “Riders on the Storm.” The band was the creative vehicle for singer Jim Morrison, one of rock music’s mythic figures.

Members

Musical style and themes

The Doors’ instrumentalists—keyboardist Ray Manzarek, guitarist Robby Krieger, and drummer John Densmore—combined backgrounds in classical music and blues with the improvisational daring of a jazz band. It was the dark-edged eroticism of Morrison’s baritone and poetic lyrics, however, that set the Los Angeles-based quartet apart from the prevailing hippie utopianism that pervaded West Coast rock in the late 1960s. Morrison’s early death, at age 27, only enhanced his reputation as the quintessential rock showman and troubled artiste for subsequent generations.

(Read Britannica’s essay “Is 27 an Especially Deadly Age for Musicians?”)

Band formation and breakthrough

Morrison and Manzarek, acquaintances from the film school of the University of California, Los Angeles, conceived the group after the singer recited one of his poems to the keyboardist on a southern California beach. Morrison took the band’s name from Aldous Huxley’s book on mescaline, The Doors of Perception (1954), which in turn refers to a line in a poem by Romantic artist and writer William Blake. The Doors acquired a reputation for pushing the boundaries of rock composition, both musically and lyrically, in performances on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles. Their breakthrough hit, “Light My Fire,” was an anthem in 1967, but it was songs such as “The End”—an 11-minute Oedipal drama with sexually explicit lyrics and a swirling ebb-and-flow arrangement—that established the Doors’ reputation as one of rock’s most potent, controversial, and theatrical acts. Indeed, the group was banned from the Whisky a Go Go in Los Angeles after an early performance of the song.

Arrest of Jim Morrison in 1969

Though the group’s ambitious music encompassed everything from Chicago blues to German cabaret, their string of pop hits caused them to be dismissed by some critics as a teenybopper act. This deeply troubled Morrison, who craved acceptance as a serious artist. By the time of the release of the Doors’ third album, Waiting for the Sun (1968), Morrison had created a shamanistic alter ego for himself, “the Lizard King”; the singer’s poem “The Celebration of the Lizard” was printed inside the record jacket. His concert performances were marked by increasingly outrageous stunts, and Morrison was arrested in 1969 for allegedly exposing himself onstage in Miami. He was convicted on indecent exposure and profanity charges and sentenced to six months in prison but was granted bail pending his appeal. The incident served notice of Morrison’s physical decline, in part because of his addiction to alcohol.

Death of Jim Morrison and later band projects

Morrison took increasing solace in his poetry, some of which was published, and the group’s tours became less frequent. The Doors reestablished their artistic credibility with the blues-steeped Morrison Hotel (1970), but after the quartet’s sixth studio release, L.A. Woman (1971), Morrison retreated to Paris, where he hoped to pursue a literary career. Instead, he died there of heart failure in 1971. Without Morrison, the Doors produced two undistinguished albums before breaking up. They reunited briefly in 1978 to record An American Prayer, providing backing music for poetry Morrison recorded before his death. Manzarek also produced albums for the punk band X.

In the early 2000s Manzarek and Krieger began touring with other musicians standing in for Morrison and Densmore, but lawsuits by Morrison’s parents and Densmore forced them to perform under the name “the Doors of the 21st Century.” Both Densmore and Manzarek released memoirs, and they collaborated with Krieger and Rolling Stone journalist Ben Fong-Torres on an authorized biography of the band, published as The Doors in 2006.

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Legacy and honors

In death Morrison was lionized by generations of fans, both as a youth icon and as an influence on singers such as Iggy Pop, Echo and the Bunnymen’s Ian McCulloch, and Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder. The Doors’ releases continued to sell in the millions, and The Doors, a 1991 movie directed by Oliver Stone and starring Val Kilmer as Morrison, was a critical and popular success. The Doors were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 and received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 2007. Morrison was posthumously pardoned in 2010 for his indecent exposure conviction in Miami. In 2014 the band’s debut album was added to the National Recording Registry, a list of audio recordings deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the U.S. Library of Congress.

Greg Kot The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica

Jim Morrison

American singer and songwriter
Also known as: James Douglas Morrison
Quick Facts
In full:
James Douglas Morrison
Also known as:
“the Lizard King”
Born:
December 8, 1943, Melbourne, Florida, U.S.
Died:
July 3, 1971, Paris, France (aged 27)

News

Val Kilmer, 'Top Gun' and Batman star with an intense approach, dies at 65 Apr. 2, 2025, 11:37 AM ET (AP)

Jim Morrison (born December 8, 1943, Melbourne, Florida, U.S.—died July 3, 1971, Paris, France) was an American singer, songwriter, and poet who was the charismatic front man of the California-based psychedelic rock group the Doors. His death at age 27 contributed to him becoming one of rock music’s mythic figures. Calling himself “the Lizard King,” Morrison cultivated a dark and mysterious persona that countered the hippie optimism of the 1960s counterculture.

(Read Britannica’s essay “Is 27 an Especially Deadly Age for Musicians?”)

Family background and early life

Morrison’s father, George (“Steve”) Morrison, was a naval officer (ultimately an admiral). His mother, Clara Morrison (née Clarke), worked in the U.S. Navy’s public relations office in Hawaii, where she met Steve Morrison while he was stationed there during World War II. Both were witnesses to the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. They married in 1943 and had three children, the eldest of whom was Jim.

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The Morrisons moved frequently, though the family settled down in the Washington, D.C., suburb of Alexandria, Virginia, where Morrison attended high school and was a good but rebellious student. He was an avid reader of classical Greek literature and such writers as French poet Arthur Rimbaud and Beat novelist Jack Kerouac. In 2021 his sister, Anne Morrison Chewning, told People magazine that her brother’s reading was fueled by the family’s frequent moves. “Because you’re always the new person, it takes a while to get used to people. To Jim [books] were hugely, hugely important.” Morrison also began writing poetry in high school.

Forming the Doors

He began his college education in 1961 at St. Petersburg Junior College (now St. Petersburg College) in Florida and developed his talents as a performer by reciting his poetry at the local Beaux Arts coffeehouse. He subsequently transferred to Florida State University and then to the University of California, Los Angeles, where he studied film. There he met Ray Manzarek, who played the organ in the rock group that the two formed in 1965 with guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore. They called themselves the Doors, taking their name from Aldous Huxley’s book on mescaline, The Doors of Perception (1954), which was itself titled after a line in a poem by Romantic writer and artist William Blake.

“The Lizard King”

For a brief period in the mid-1960s, the Doors were the house band of the Whisky a Go Go, a much-storied club on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles. At about the same time, the group signed with Elektra Records, for which they released a string of hit singles, including “Light My Fire” (1967) and “Hello, I Love You” (1968), and critically acclaimed albums such as The Doors (1967) and L.A. Woman (1971). The dark-edged eroticism of Morrison’s baritone voice and poetic lyrics helped make the band one of rock music’s most potent, controversial, and theatrical acts.

Frequently appearing onstage dressed in skintight black leather pants and channeling his shamanistic alter ego, “the Lizard King,” Morrison also became known for his heavy drinking and drug use and outrageous stage behavior. During a 1969 concert in Miami, he allegedly exposed himself onstage, and he was later convicted on indecent exposure and profanity charges. He was sentenced to six months in prison but was granted bail pending his appeal (in 2010 he was posthumously pardoned).

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Death

In 1971 Morrison left the Doors to write poetry and moved to Paris with his longtime girlfriend, Pamela Courson. He died later that year. Courson reported to authorities that she had found Morrison dead in the bathtub of their Paris apartment. The cause of death was officially listed as heart failure, but there was no autopsy, leading to various conspiracy theories. (Courson died of a heroin overdose in 1974.)

Morrison’s grave in the Père-Lachaise Cemetery became a mecca for music fans and one of Paris’s most unlikely tourist attractions. After its headstone was damaged in the 1980s, Morrison’s parents installed a new one in 1990 with the epitaph “True to His Spirit” in Greek. (Although the rebellious Morrison had been estranged from his parents when he died, Courson later told his family he had been interested in reconciling with them.)

Legacy

In 1978 the remaining former Doors gathered again to record backing tracks for poetry Morrison had recorded before his death, releasing the result as An American Prayer by “Jim Morrison, music by the Doors.” The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993 and received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 2007. The Doors, the band’s 1967 debut album, was added to the National Recording Registry in 2014; the registry is a list of audio recordings deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the U.S. Library of Congress.

Continuing interest in Morrison’s life and death have propelled the publication of many biographies, and his posthumous popularity has also been explored by those who knew him, such as Eve Babitz, a former girlfriend whose acclaimed essay “Jim Morrison Is Dead and Living in Hollywood” was published in Esquire in 1991. That same year the band and Morrison’s story came to the motion picture screen as The Doors, directed by Oliver Stone and starring Val Kilmer as Morrison and Meg Ryan as Courson. The Collected Works of Jim Morrison: Poetry, Journals, Transcripts and Lyrics was published in 2021 and features a foreword by novelist Tom Robbins and a prologue by Morrison’s sister.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.