Behind The Song

Jim Morrison Resented This Massive Doors Hit From 1968

In the smoke-and-mirrors world of the music industry, things are rarely exactly as they seem. Though a major commercial success might seem like something any band would be ecstatic over, The Doors frontman Jim Morrison had much different feelings about one of the bandโ€™s biggest hits, โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€.

The California rock band released what would become a major pop single on their third studio album, Waiting For The Sun. The track topped the charts in the United States and Canada and enjoyed Top 20 success in the United Kingdom, South Africa, and New Zealand, and throughout Europe. In terms of mainstream successes, โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€ was the bandโ€™s next big follow-up to โ€œLight My Fireโ€.

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For Elektra founder Jac Holzman, โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€ came with a sigh of relief. With Morrison growing increasingly more erratic, Elektra was understandably concerned that The Doors as a whole were going off the rails. With another pop hit under their belts, Elektra could breathe easy once more. Morrison, however, did not share that sentiment.

Jim Morrison Initially Disliked The Doorsโ€™ โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€

Compared to other Doors tracks, โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€ was certainly more simplistic and naive in nature. Even Bruce Botnick, The Doorsโ€™ studio engineer, described the track as โ€œso teenage.โ€ (That would make sense, too, considering Jim Morrison wrote the song after becoming infatuated with a teenage girl he saw walking down the beach. Social norms, particularly in the world of rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll, were very weird and absolutely problematic in the 1960s.)

While Morrison might have felt passionate enough about his subject matter when he first wrote โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€, he grew to resent the fact that Elektra was favoring singles like that over Morrisonโ€™s other, moodier works. In Mick Wallโ€™s Love Becomes A Funeral Pyre: A Biography Of The Doors, he described Waiting For The Sun as a โ€œbitter disappointmentโ€ and โ€œembarrassmentโ€ for Morrison. The track, Wall argued, was perceived by Morrison as โ€œthe end of The Doors as a viable vehicle for his boundless talents.โ€

That โ€œboundless talentโ€ included a lengthy avant-garde number titled โ€œCelebration Of The Lizardโ€, which Morrison regarded as a โ€œmasterwork.โ€ Elektra, of course, disagreed. To put it in the words of Wall, the label told the band there was to be โ€œno more f***ing around.โ€ That included songs about lizards with no real pop sensibility.

โ€œI like the other side better,โ€ Morrison once said about โ€œHello, I Love Youโ€โ€™s B-side, โ€œLove Streetโ€. โ€œI was hoping they would flip it and play that. But they havenโ€™t. But now that we have got our foot in the door, perhaps they will listen a bit more.โ€

If the rest of The Doorsโ€™ careerโ€”and their increasingly off-the-wall releasesโ€”were any indication, Morrison was absolutely right.

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