Light My Fire

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"Light My Fire" is a song by the American rock band the Doors. Although it was principally written by the band's guitarist, Robby Krieger,[1] songwriting was credited to the entire band. Recognized as one of the earliest examples of psychedelic rock,[2] it was recorded in August 1966 and released in January 1967 on their eponymous debut album. Due to its erotic lyrics and innovative structure, the track is widely regarded as an anthem of the 1960s psychedelia and counterculture movements.[3]

Issued as an edited single on April 24, 1967,[4] the song spent three weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart; it re-entered the Billboard Hot 100 in 1968 following the success of José Feliciano's cover version (which charted at number three), peaking at number 87. The song also spent one week on the Cash Box Top 100, nearly a year after its recording. At the 11th Annual Grammy Awards in 1969, the cover by Feliciano won the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Male Pop Vocal Performance. Feliciano also won the Grammy Award for Best New Artist.[5]

History

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Jim had been writing all the songs and then one day we realized we didn't have enough tunes, so he said, "Hey, why don't you guys try and write songs?" I wrote "Light My Fire" that night and brought it to the next rehearsalScript error: No such module "String".... It's always kind of bugged me that so many people don't know I was the composer.

Robby Krieger, discussing the song's writing process during an interview with Guitar World.[6]

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"Light My Fire" originated in early 1966 as a composition by Robby Krieger,[7] who said that he was inspired by the melody of "Hey Joe" and the lyrics of the Rolling Stones' "Play with Fire".[8] On taking his initial composition to the band, John Densmore suggested that it should have more of a Latin rhythm, Jim Morrison wrote the second verse and part of the chorus ("Try to set the night on fire"),[9] while Ray Manzarek added the Bach-influenced introductory organ motif; Densmore also suggested that it should open with a single snare drum hit.[8]

File:Voxcontinental.jpg
The Vox Continental organ was played by Ray Manzarek for the song's recording

The band started playing the song in performances in April 1966, and extended it with a jazzy improvisation. When the Doors performed the song at live concerts, Manzarek played the song's bass line with his left hand on a Fender Rhodes Piano Bass, while performing the main keyboard lines on a Vox Continental using his right hand. When they came to record the song later in the year, producer Paul A. Rothchild brought in session musician Larry Knechtel to overdub a Fender Precision Bass guitar to double the keyboard bass line.[8][10][11][12] Rothchild also suggested that the recording repeat the introductory motif at the end of the track.[8]

Although the album version was just over seven minutes long, it was widely requested for radio play,[1] notably by Los Angeles DJ Dave Diamond, and Elektra Records owner Jac Holzman asked that a shorter version be released as a single.[8] Despite the band's reluctance,[13] Rothchild edited a single version, cut down to under three minutes with nearly all the instrumental break removed for airplay on AM radio.[7]

The Ed Sullivan Show

The band appeared on various TV shows, such as American Bandstand, miming to a playback of the single. "Light My Fire" was also performed live by the Doors on The Ed Sullivan Show broadcast on September 17, 1967. The Doors were asked by producer Bob Precht, Ed Sullivan's son-in-law, to change the line "girl, we couldn't get much higher", as the sponsors were uncomfortable with the possible reference to drugs. However, the meaning of the line was confirmed to be literal, as in "high in the sky".[14][15] The band agreed to do so, and did a rehearsal using the amended lyrics, "girl, we couldn't get much better". However, during the live performance, lead singer Jim Morrison sang the original, unaltered lyrics.[14] Sullivan did not shake Morrison's hand as he left the stage. The band had been negotiating a multi-episode deal with the producers; however, after violating the agreement not to perform the offending line, they were informed they would never perform on the show again. Morrison's response was "Hey man. We just did the Sullivan show."[16]

This performance was portrayed in Oliver Stone's 1991 biopic film, but with Morrison singing "higher" more emphatically and without his subsequent retort to Sullivan and the show's producer.[17]

Buick TV commercial

Drummer John Densmore recalled that Buick offered $75,000 in October 1968 to adapt the song for use in a Buick TV commercial ("Come on, Buick, light my fire").[18][19] Morrison, however, was still in London after a European tour had just ended on September 20, and could not be contacted by the other band members, who agreed to the deal in his absence. As the band had agreed in 1965 to both equal splits and everyone having veto power in decisions, Morrison consequently called Buick and threatened to personally smash a Buick with a sledgehammer on television, should the commercial be aired.[20]

Musical structure

"Light My Fire" is notated in the key of A minor.[21] Ray Manzarek's keyboard playing descends from G to D Major, then goes to F and B-flat major; continuing onto the pitches of E-flat and A-flat major, before returning to the initial key of A Major.[22] This alternation was based on Johann Bach's "Two and Three Part Inventions",[23] but author Philip Clark has suggested that it may have been inspired by Dave Brubeck's compositions.[24] The extended solo arrangement is performed throughout the keys of A Minor and B Minor, the same chord progression used by John Coltrane on his cover version of "My Favorite Things".[25][26] According to Manzarek, the instrumental sections were an homage to John Coltrane whom the band admired.[27] Parts of the solos are polyrhythmic.[28] Some observers noticed baroque pop influences in the song.[29][30]

Speed discrepancy

The 40th Anniversary mix of the debut album presents a stereo version of "Light My Fire" in speed-corrected form for the first time. The speed discrepancy (being about 3.5% slow) was brought to Bruce Botnick's attention by Brigham Young University professor Michael Hicks, who noted that all video and audio live performances of the Doors performing the song, the sheet music, and statements of band members show the song in a key almost a half step higher (key of A) than the stereo LP release (key of A♭/G♯). Until the 2006 remasters, only the original 45 RPM singles ("Light My Fire" and "Break On Through") were produced at the correct speed.[31]

Release and legacy

File:Light My Fire - ad 1967.jpg
Cashbox advertisement, May 27, 1967

A live version was released in 1983 on their live album Alive, She Cried,[32] the first of several live albums released in subsequent decades to include the song. "Light My Fire" achieved modest success in Australia, where it peaked at number 22 on the ARIA chart. The single originally reached number 49 in the UK in 1967, but experienced belated success in that country in 1991, when a reissue peaked at number seven. This reissue was more successful in Ireland, peaking atop the IRMA chart for two weeks in June. The reissue occurred due to revived interest in the band following Oliver Stone's film biopic The Doors.

The single was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America in September 1967 for exceeding one million units shipped.[33] As of December 1971, it was the band's best-selling single with over 927,000 copies sold.[34] It was also certified 2× Platinum by the RIAA in November 2024 for reaching 2,000,000 digital units.[33] Billboard described the single as a "top discotheque offering" with an "infectious beat" that "really grooves from start to finish."[35] Cash Box called the single a "potent, pounding foot-stomper with unlimited potential."[36]

"Light My Fire" has been widely considered as the Doors' signature song,[37][38] and a quintessential work of the psychedelic rock genre.[39] In 2004 and 2010, the song was ranked at number 35 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time,[40] then it was re-ranked at number 310 on the 2021 list.[41] It was included in RIAA's Songs of the Century list, at number 52. In 2014 NME ranked the song 199th in its 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list.[42] Feliciano's cover won the 1969 Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance,[43] the same year he also won the Grammy for Best New Artist.[44] In 1998, the track was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame under the category Rock (single).[45] Artists such as Brian Wilson, Jean-Jacques Burnel, and Feliciano himself, among others, are admirers of the song.[46][47][48]

The house on Alma Real Drive where Robby Krieger wrote "Light My Fire" was destroyed in the wildfires which devastated the Pacific Palisades in January 2025.[49]

Personnel

The Doors

Additional musician

Charts

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Certifications

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José Feliciano version

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The Puerto Rican vocalist and guitarist José Feliciano enjoyed significant international success when he released his version of "Light My Fire" in 1968 as a single on the RCA Victor label. Only a year after the original had been a number-one hit, his cover spent twelve weeks on the US Billboard Hot 100,[64] debuting at number 62 the week of July 27, 1968 and peaking at number 3 the weeks of August 31, September 7 and 14, 1968.[65][66][67] His version became the bigger hit in Australia and also in Canada, where it reached number one.[68]

Feliciano's remake blended Latin influences, including a mixture of classic Spanish guitar, and soul, with American pop.[69] It contains "proto-Latin rock" stylings,[70] and a slower tempo than the Doors original version.[48] In a 1969 interview, Feliciano said that he liked the song when he first heard it, but felt that he should wait a year before releasing the song. He also said that "[[California Dreamin'|California DreaminTemplate:'-]]" was the original A-side of the single.[48]

The single helped to spur the worldwide success of its album, Feliciano!, which was nominated for multiple Grammy Awards in 1969. Feliciano's arrangement of "Light My Fire" has influenced several subsequent versions, including that by Will Young. Songwriter Robby Krieger said in an interview about the cover: "It's really a great feeling to have written a classic. I think I owe a big debt to Jose Feliciano because he is actually the one, when he did it, everybody started doing it. He did a whole different arrangement on it."[71]

Feliciano revisited the song, performing a duet with Minnie Riperton on her 1979 album Minnie.[72]

Charts

Weekly charts

Template:Single chartTemplate:Single chart
Chart (1968) Peak
position
Australia (Go-Set)[73] 15
Brazil[74] 2
Canada RPM Top Singles[68] 1
FranceScript error: No such module "Unsubst". 54
Template:Single chart
Mexico[75] 3
New Zealand (Listener)[53] 16
Norway[76] 7
SwedenScript error: No such module "Unsubst". 13
SpainScript error: No such module "Unsubst". 25
US Billboard Hot 100[77] 3
US Hot Rhythm & Blues Singles (Billboard)[78] 29
US Cash Box Top 100[79] 3

Year-end charts

Chart (1968) Rank
Canada[80] 27
US Billboard Hot 100[81] 52
US Cash Box[82] 37

Amii Stewart version

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In 1979, Amii Stewart released a disco version of "Light My Fire", together with a medley titled "137 Disco Heaven". It was a big hit in the UK, where it reached No. 5,[83] and a mild hit in West Germany, peaking at No. 26.[84] In the U.S., the song peaked at No. 69 on the Billboard Hot 100[85] and No. 36 on the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart.[86]

It reached the top 10 in the UK a second time in 1985, in remixed form together with "Knock on Wood/Ash 48". This release peaked at No. 7.[87]

Track listing

  • 1979 12"
  1. "Light My Fire" / "137 Disco Heaven"Template:Snd8:22
  2. "Bring It on Back to Me"Template:Snd3:58
  • 1985 UK 12"
  1. "Knock on Wood" / "Ash 48"Template:Snd7:45
  2. "Light My Fire" / "137 Disco Heaven"Template:Snd7:35

Charts

Weekly charts

Template:Single chartTemplate:Single chartTemplate:Single chart
Chart (1979) Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[88] 14
Canada Top Singles (RPM) 58
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)[89] 27
Ireland (IRMA)[90] 20
UK Singles (OCC)[91] 5
US Billboard Hot 100[92] 69
US Hot Soul (Billboard)[93] 36
West Germany (Official German Charts) 26

Year-end charts

Chart (1979) Position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[88] 91

Will Young version

Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". English singer and Pop Idol series 1 winner Will Young covered "Light My Fire" in 2002.[94] He originally performed a piano version of the song in the final 50 of Pop Idol, and again, with a backing track, in the final 10. A studio version, recorded in the style of Puerto Rican musician José Feliciano's version, was later released as his second single. The song went straight to the number one spot in the UK Singles Chart, selling 177,000 copies in its first week of release, while staying at number one for two weeks. Young also performed the song on World Idol, where he came in fifth place.[95]

Track listings

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Credits and personnel

Credits are lifted from the From Now On album booklet.[96]

Studios

Personnel

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Charts

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Certifications

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Release history

"Light My Fire" release history
Region Date Label Format(s) Ref(s)
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References

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Further reading

Burns, Gary. "A Typology of 'Hooks' in Popular Records."Popular Music 6.1 (1987): 1-20. Web.

External links

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