Skip to content
VISIT OUR WOKING STORE
VISIT OUR WOKING STORE

The Doors - Live At The Matrix 1967: The Original Masters

Edition: 5x Black Vinyl LP + 7"
Condition: New
Save 20% Save 20%
Original price £139.99
Original price £21.99 - Original price £139.99
Original price £139.99
Current price £111.99
£21.99 - £111.99
Current price £111.99
Condition: New

Track Listing / Description
March 7, 1967 First Set 
01 Back Door Man
02 My Eyes Have Seen You
03 Soul Kitchen
04 All Blues (Instrumental)
05 Get Out Of My Life Woman
06 When The Music's Over
March 7, 1967 Second Set 
07 Close To You
08 Crawling King Snake
09 I Can't See Your Face In My Mind
10 People Are Strange
11 Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)
12 Crystal Ship
13 Twentieth Century Fox
March 7, 1967 – Third Set 
14 Moonlight Drive
15 Summer's Almost Gone
16 Unhappy Girl
17 Woman Is A Devil / Rock Me Baby
18 Break On Through (To The Other Side)
19 Light My Fire
20 The End
March 8 or 9, 1967 
21 The End (Partial) / Let's Feed Ice Cream To The Rats
March 10, 1967 – First Set 
22 My Eyes Have Seen You
23 Soul Kitchen
24 I Can't See Your Face In My Mind
25 People Are Strange
26 When The Music's Over
March 10, 1967 – Second Set 
27 Money
28 Who Do You Love
29 Moonlight Drive
30 Summer's Almost Gone
31 I'm A King Bee
32 Gloria
33 Break On Through (To The Other Side)
March 10, 1967 – Third Set 
34 March 10, 1967 – Third Set
35 Summertime
36 Back Door Man
37 Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)
 
Very early on in their career, The Doors played at a small, hole-in-the-wall club called The Matrix, which was co-owned by Jefferson Airplane's Marty Balin. The rule at the time was that bands from LA had to play The Matrix when they came to San Francisco as "tax" and homage to the bands that built the local scene. The Doors happily obliged, and co-owner Peter Abram recorded the band's two shows – March 7 and March 10, 1967. The set features soon-to-be beloved covers by The Doors such as "Gloria" and blues favorites like "Alabama Song (Whisky Bar) " that would define their influence and sound as they worked out originals like "Break on Through (To the Other Side)." The complete set from both shows was released once before, but it was discovered after release that they were taken from third-generation tapes of the recordings. In the ensuing years, The Doors have located the first-generation recordings, and this is the first time the sets from those nights will be released in full.