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Monday, May 20, 2013
Ray Manzarek, founding member of The Doors, dies at 74
Ray Manzarek of The Doors performs at the Sunset Strip Music
Festival launch party celebrating The Doors at the House of Blues in West
Hollywood, Calif., on Aug. 16, 2012. /Chris Pizzello/AP
Ray Manzarek, the keyboardist who was a founding member of The Doors, has
died. He was 74.
Publicist Heidi Robinson-Fitzgerald said in a news release that Manzarek died
Monday at the RoMed Clinic in Rosenheim, Germany, surrounded by his family. He
had been stricken by bile duct cancer.
Manzarek founded The Doors after meeting then-poet Jim Morrison in
California. The band went on to become one of the most successful rock 'n' roll
acts to emerge from the 1960s and continues to resonate with fans decades after
Morrison's death brought the band to an end. The Doors sold more than 100
million albums worldwide on hits like "Hello, I Love You," "Riders on the
Storm," "Light My Fire," and "Break On Through to the Other Side."
Manzarek, a Chicago native, continued to remain active in music after
Morrison's 1971 death. He briefly tried to hold the band together by serving as
vocalist, but eventually the group fell apart. He played in other bands over the
years, produced other acts, became an author and worked on films.
The Doors were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Manzarek is
among the most notable keyboard players in rock history. His lead-instrument
work with the band at a time when the guitar often dominated added a distinct
end-times flavor that matched Morrison's often out there imagery and
persona.
Morrison and Manzarek met at UCLA film school and ran into each other in
Venice a few months after graduation, Manzarek recounted in a 1967 interview
with Billboard.
Outwardly the two seemed so different. The strikingly tall, dark and handsome
Morrison looked the part of rock star, while Manzarek, with glasses and
comparatively close-cropped blonde hair, retained a more professorial look.
Inwardly, though, they were kindred spirits, as Manzarek discovered when
Morrison read him the lyrics for a song called "Moonlight Drive."
"I'd never heard lyrics to a rock song like that before," Manzarek said. "We
talked a while before we decided to get a group together and make a million
dollars."
The band would make far more than that. The Doors, which also included
guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore, has sold more than 100
million albums and their music has been re-released and repackaged multiple
times over the years, been featured prominently in movies and holds an
oft-debated place in rock history. Manzarek and Krieger reunited to tour as The
Doors in recent years.
While Morrison, with his proto-celebrity lifestyle and tragic end, forever
will remain the face of The Doors, you could argue Manzarek's keyboard work was
every bit as important and helped balance some of the singer's more over-the-top
moments.
His creepy organ line on "Light My Fire" adds a weirdo menace to what
outwardly is a rock `n' roll pick-up song. And his after-hours, lounge style on
"Riders On the Storm" transforms that song into an epic unlike anything else the
band ever did.
Manzarek was portrayed by Kyle McLachlan in the 1991 Oliver Stone biopic,
"The Doors," and wrote a best-selling memoir about his experiences, "Light My
Fire: My Life with The Doors," in 1998.
Manzarek is survived by his wife Dorothy, son Pablo, and three grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers, family members ask that donations be made in Manzarek's name
to Standup2Cancer.org.
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