The Doors – Strange Days
Label: |
Rhino Records (2) – R1 519558 |
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Series: |
Rhino Vinyl – R1 519558 |
Format: |
|
Country: |
US |
Released: |
|
Genre: |
Rock |
Style: |
Classic Rock |
Tracklist
A1 | Strange Days | 3:05 | |
A2 | You're Lost Little Girl | 3:01 | |
A3 | Love Me Two Times | 3:23 | |
A4 | Unhappy Girl | 2:00 | |
A5 | Horse Latitudes | 1:30 | |
A6 | Moonlight Drive | 3:00 | |
B1 | People Are Strange | 2:10 | |
B2 | My Eyes Have Seen You | 2:22 | |
B3 | I Can't See Your Face In My Mind | 3:18 | |
B4 | When The Music's Over | 11:00 |
Companies, etc.
- Record Company – Elektra Records
- Mastered At – Record Technology Incorporated – 16007
- Pressed By – Record Technology Incorporated – 16007
- Lacquer Cut At – Bernie Grundman Mastering
- Copyright © – Nipper Music
- Published By – Nipper Music
- Engineered At – Sunset Sound Recorders
Credits
- Bass – Douglas Lubahn*
- Cover [Concept], Art Direction – William S. Harvey
- Drums – John Densmore
- Engineer [Audio Engineering] – Bruce Botnick
- Guitar – Robby Krieger
- Keyboards, Marimba – Ray Manzarek
- Lacquer Cut By – BG*
- Photography By [Cover Photography] – Joel Brodsky
- Producer – Paul A. Rothchild
- Supervised By [Production Supervisor] – Jac Holzman
- Vocals – Jim Morrison
- Words By, Music By – The Doors
- Written-By, Arranged By, Performer – The Doors
Notes
Like most Rhino reissues - Rhino pressed both a US version and an EU version [The Doors - Strange Days]. This is the US pressing.
Front sticker has Rhino Vinyl [Rhino Records imprint] logo on it together with cat number.
From Rhino Records website: "The 12" reissue on 180-gram HQ virgin vinyl presents the original stereo mixes, artwork and inner sleeves.
The laquers were cut at Bernie Grundman Mastering in Hollywood, CA under the direct supervision of original Doors producer/engineer Bruce Botnick and Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman."
Rhino catalog # from inner groove & front sticker.
Front sticker has Rhino Vinyl [Rhino Records imprint] logo on it together with cat number.
From Rhino Records website: "The 12" reissue on 180-gram HQ virgin vinyl presents the original stereo mixes, artwork and inner sleeves.
The laquers were cut at Bernie Grundman Mastering in Hollywood, CA under the direct supervision of original Doors producer/engineer Bruce Botnick and Elektra Records founder Jac Holzman."
Rhino catalog # from inner groove & front sticker.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- Barcode (On Sticker Only): 081227986513
- Rights Society: ASCAP
- Matrix / Runout (Side A Runout, Variant 1, Etched): RHI1-74881-2 A 16007.1(3)... BG
- Matrix / Runout (Side B Runout, Variant 1, Etched): RHI1-74881-2 B 16007.2(3)... BG
- Matrix / Runout (Side A Runout, Variant 2, Etched [R1-519558 A Stamped]): R1-519558 A RHI1-74881-2 A 16007.1(3)... BG
- Matrix / Runout (Side B Runout, Variant 2, Etched [R1-519558 B Stamped]): R1-519558 B RHI1-74881-2 B 16007.2(3)... BG
Other Versions (5 of 392)
View AllTitle (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
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Recently Edited
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Strange Days (LP, Album, Stereo, CTH (Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute)) | Elektra | EKS-74014 | US | 1967 | ||
Recently Edited
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Strange Days (LP, Mono, Album) | Elektra | EKL-4014, EKS-74014 | UK | 1967 | ||
Strange Days (LP, Album, Stereo) | Elektra | EKS-7 4014, EKS-74014 | UK | 1967 | |||
Recently Edited
|
Strange Days (Reel-To-Reel, 3 ¾ ips, Stereo, Album) | Elektra | EKX 4014, EK 4014 | US | 1967 | ||
Strange Days (LP, Album, Stereo, Allentown Pressing) | Elektra | EKS-74014 | US | 1967 |
Recommendations
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2010 USVinyl —LP, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Stereo
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2016 WorldwideVinyl —LP, Album, Reissue, Remastered, Repress, Stereo
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Reviews
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Great sounding copy issues with the pressing noise though out but if you can get a clean copy worth the price
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Another awesome Bernie G mastering triumph! Unreal ####ing sonics on my LP, which also has whisper-quiet vinyl. Some songs have so much space to them it's unreal. The driving, pounding bass on 'Moonlight Drive' is unbelievable. Jim & The Boys hit a god-damned grand-slam homer with this album...
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Edited 4 years agoConfirming what johnrecords said 4 years ago. Bought new and sealed today : strong, audible background noise and hiss as soon as the needle touches the groove. Returning it. Unbelievable... just how does it get in store ?
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Edited 4 years agoAs for me great recording, great mastering. Clean and jucie sound.
Edited: what about noise, my issue haven't it at all. Still in great shape, listening to it a lot. -
Great album and remastering, but pressing contains too much background noise! If you are particular, you may want to forgo this issue and go straight for the 45 RPM Analogue Productions issue. This is the second Doors Rhino issue containing too much background noise.
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Edited 6 years agoThe Doors had straightforward album covers all featured a shot of the band... except for one. Their 1967 album Strange Days featured a strongman, a dwarf, a juggler, a pair of acrobats, and a trumpet player. The idea, formulated by photographer Joel Brodsky, was to shoot a group of street performers in New York City. It was supposed to be simple, but the actual shoot was far from it. In fact, the majority of the people featured on the cover of Strange Days aren't street performers at all. But that's rock and roll, right? All spontaneity and improvisation.
The only reason Brodsky was looking to shoot street performers, instead of just another shot of the band for the album cover, was because Jim Morrison refused to be photographed for the album. Like all egotistical, shirtless rock band frontmen, he didn't want to be the center of attention. What's even more confounding about Morrison's refusal to work with Brodsky on the cover of Strange Days is the fact that the two had a working relationship, as Brodsky was responsible for the most famous shot of the Doors' frontman. You know the one; it's been plastered on dorm room walls everywhere for decades, Morrison's gaze as icy as his nipples suggest. So, with Morrison refusing to appear on the cover, Brodsky had to go elsewhere. His proposal for a cover adorned with street performers, an idea apparently inspired by Federico Fellini's 1954 film La Strada, was greenlighted, and while the final cover is convincing, Brodksy had one hell of a time making it.
Of all the performers on the cover, only the acrobats are true street performers. The rest of the cast is a potpourri of amateurs with day jobs. The juggler, for instance, is Brodsky's assistant, Frank Kollegy, who reportedly kept screwing up the shoot because he, like so many photography assistants at that time, couldn't juggle. The dwarves, one who appears on the cover and the other on the back (twins, you see!), were reluctant to shoot because they were actors, not models, and had to be hired as a pair. Brodsky referred to them as "the Santa's elves." The weightlifter was a bouncer at the Friars Club whom Brodsky had met through a friend. In 2005, Brodsky recalled that going to the shoot was a surreal experience, considering the eclectic cast of characters, especially when they all "piled into the limo" with the "dwarves sitting on the strongman's lap smoking cigars." Perhaps most interesting is the role of the trumpet player. Brodsky commissioned the work on the fly, paying a ing cab driver $5 to stand in the shot with a trumpet. He's even wearing his own hat, so hooray for cost efficiency in the wardrobe department. And even Jim Morrison's own stubbornness couldn't keep Jim Morrison off the cover, as the whole band can be seen on a poster in the background.
Despite the obstacles, the result is an unforgettable shot; a bunch of one-day circus performers being strange, capturing the often surreal and Vaudevillian music of the Doors. Certainly better than another stuffy, self-important shot of a self-serious band.
*** The Fun Facts: The album art was photographed at an 18th century stables on Sniffen Court in New York City.
Review by Jenell Kesler -
this was the only 180G re-issue i saw on the list,i believe this is what i have.my copy only has the EKS-74014 number on it,has an Elektra center label,but NO Rhino # on it at all.the plastic cover on the jacket does have a Rhino Records sticker--"180-Gram Vinyl RhinoVinyl" w/UPC # 0-8122-79865-13
the other sticker on the front plastic wrap is from RTI/Record Technology Inc.-" Vinyl Pressing.HQ-180"
it cost $24.99
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