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How do you rate an album like this? On originality, it gets about a zero, but as a hint at what another
Doors album could have sounded like, it gets a nine out of nine -- "Tales From a Wizard" aping the group at its most pretentious, and "Devil's Child" as a parody of numbers like "Love Me Two Times." Other titles, like "Spiders Will Dance (On Your Face While You Sleep)" (which opens up seemingly bent on parodying "Alabama Song") and "Stand Beside My Fire" are equally self-explanatory. Actually, it's hard to imagine
Morrison,
Manzarek,
Krieger, and
Densmore coming out with something quite this unimaginative -- they always added something new to each album -- unless they were producing themselves and
Morrison was really wasted. But the album is a good imitation of what
the Doors' music sounded like if you weren't listening too closely to it on the radio. At the time, it fulfilled a need for some listeners, and it was an early indicator of just how large
Jim Morrison loomed in the back of some listeners' consciousnesses, long before
Oliver Stone ever got near a movie camera. The sound is decent but unexceptional, not that this is a big consideration on this sort of album. There never was a Part 2, incidentally, or at least not one that saw the light of day, but this record did point the way toward careers for
Doors tribute bands like
Crystal Ship,
L.A. Woman, and
Soft Parade.
AMG Review by Bruce Eder
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