"****Fascinating, informative, extraordinary, and essential reading for
the legions of Jim Morrison fans."--Midwest Book Review
Shrouded in mystery and the swirling psychedelic sounds of the Sixties,
the Doors have captivated listeners across seven decades. Jim
Morrison--haunted, beautiful, and ultimately doomed--transformed from
rock god to American icon. With each successive generation of fans, the
Doors become more popular and transcendent. Yet the band's full
significance is buried beneath layers of mythology and folklore.
In Roadhouse Blues, Bob Batchelor presents an epic tale of one of
rock's (and America's) most significant periods, as the Age of Aquarius
gave way to a new age of mayhem, presidential misdeeds, and murder.
Batchelor combines cultural history, musical and lyrical analysis, and a
broad stroke of pop-culture mythos to give fresh perspective on a
pivotal time.
Candid, authoritative, and utterly absorbing, Roadhouse Blues is a
biography of a man, a band, and an era that set the tone for the
contemporary world. Beyond the mythology, the hype, and the mystique
around Morrison's untimely death, this book takes readers on a
roller-coaster ride, examining the impact the band had on America as the
nation veered from decadence to debauchery.
"We're gonna have a real good time!"