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EuterpeThelo

(442 posts)
Sun May 24, 2026, 11:46 AM 5 hrs ago

The Doors - 60th anniversary show at the Whisky a Go Go last night

OK, so I've seen Robby Krieger play a couple of times and also once had the chance to meet him for about thirty seconds (I was trying to be unobtrusive while others mobbed him asking for autographs and selfies; I just took the opportunity to thank him for the music and tell him "People Are Strange" is the first song I ever remember hearing in a life DEFINED by music...he was kind and gracious.)

Last night, my daughter and I went to his show at the Whisky celebrating the very date in 1966 that the band played its first show there.

There were two things that basically ruined the experience for me.

One, for anyone who hasn't been, the Whisky is NOT a well laid-out venue. It's a tiny club with a 500 person capacity. Been there many, many times but this was the first time I've visited with health issues that require me to use a walker. Suffice it to say the venue is NOT set up for people with disabilities. We had reserved a second-floor balcony table (because the only seats on the main floor were about $1,000). Though the staff was great about getting us to our table, escorting us through a back door so I didn't have to ascend stairs, there is NO bathroom on the second floor. So I basically had to almost CRAWL down the stairs at one point when I had to use the facilities. Again, staff were trying to be helpful but I shouldn't have been put in a position of clinging to the banister for dear life because of my weak legs. Add to that a pushy woman who basically invited herself to use the one vacant stool at a table I had paid over $300 for to make sure I had somewhere to sit (which I wouldn't have generally minded, except she kept obstructing my access to my OWN table) and it was just a really unpleasant experience.

Second, for like half the set, they had that washed-up a$$clown of an actor, Dennis Quaid, singing vocals. He's an unabashed Trump supporter and that's pretty much all I could think about watching him get up there and disgrace himself - rich jerk publicly WHINING about the fact his daughter didn't get a scholarship she wanted!

This guy vocally defends the orange menace, whose policies are diametrically OPPOSED to everything Jim Morrison stood for. I'm sorry, Robby, but Jim would have been APPALLED with the choice to give this jagoff a spot on the stage. At least he didn't sing "The Unknown Soldier" or I may have lost it. We left early.

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The Doors - 60th anniversary show at the Whisky a Go Go last night (Original Post) EuterpeThelo 5 hrs ago OP
Kreiger and Manzurak played at Abbie Hoffman's wake in 1989 GreatGazoo 4 hrs ago #1
What was their playlist? CTyankee 4 hrs ago #2
Those were the days... ultralite001 3 hrs ago #3

GreatGazoo

(4,727 posts)
1. Kreiger and Manzurak played at Abbie Hoffman's wake in 1989
Sun May 24, 2026, 12:18 PM
4 hrs ago

It was walking distance from my apartment. I went with a friend and it was quite the scene. A guy rushed the stage with an acoustic and tried to join a song before being escorted off. Wish I had footage. A Buddhist monk moved electronic cables off of some plants. An "Alex Keaton" frat boy seemed to be there only to hit on liberal women. Dozens of other mini stories played out.

Robby and Ray were in good form and it was a nice gesture.

Years ago I went down the rabbit hole on how the Whisky became the Whisky. Wrote it up:

If restaurant tables had been delivered on time then Go-Go dancers, the Doors and a couple chapters worth of Rock n Roll history would not have happened.

For 3 months in 1983 I lived at Sunset & San Vicente right by the Whisky A Go Go. When they had Rockabilly bands during the week the neighborhood would fill up the most incredible 1950s Chevy's and other classic cars cruising. It was a time warp.
Weekends belonged to new hit bands like LA Guns, the Cure and the Plimsouls.

San Vicente is the eastern border of Beverly Hills and the top end of the notorious Sunset Strip -- an 8-block long section of Sunset Boulevard that was NOT under jurisdiction of the LAPD. The club and restaurant owners there made their own laws and had their own security.

Early in 1964 four powerful partners took over an old, nondescript bank with a plan to open a French restaurant. The group hired Tony Mafia to paint the interiors, and installed beautiful chandeliers and a really expensive sound system. But when opening day rolled around:

“None of the tables and chairs had even been delivered,” says Tanzini. "We could not open the doors to the public even though our grand opening was all over the trades."

“They paid all these kids to stand in line outside the Whisky A Go Go. Elmer and my dad locked the doors, turned the music really loud, and hired a bouncer out front to paint the impression they were packed to capacity.”

The fake out worked—and went on for a couple of days. Tanzini and the team knew they would eventually have to open, but without tables and chairs, they decided to hire local musicians to fill their empty space.

The kids loved it! Since there wasn’t any furniture, they started dancing, creating their own dance floor. “Back when the building was a bank, it had a security office that looked out over the floor. It was basically a ledge,” says Tanzini. “My father and Elmer installed bars so no one would fall off it. This was the beginning of what would eventually become a ‘go-go’ cage. Suspended cages were installed after that, and go-go dancing at the Whisky was born. They all danced the Mashed Potato, The Dog, the Monkey, The Jerk, and the Watusi.

Soon the venue was hosting groups including Arthur Lee and Love, the Byrds, the Doors, the Kinks, the Who, the Mamas and Papas, and Sonny and Cher. It also attracted stars like Sally Field, Steve McQueen, Richard Burton, and Jayne Mansfield because it was a local spot where celebrities could really let their hair down....


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