A Wonderful Day in The Doors’ Neighborhood

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The Doors took time out from recording “L.A. Woman” for publicity photos shot on the stairs of their offices at 8512 Santa Monica Blvd. The building has since served as a variety of restaurants. (Photos courtesy of rayandrobby.com)

In a place as frenetic as West Hollywood can be, it’s easy to drive through or walk by the city’s busiest intersection without realizing the substantial rock ‘n’ roll history that pervades the neighborhood where Santa Monica and La Cienega boulevards cross paths.

A wall festooned with graffiti in the Jim Morrison Room at the Alta Cienega Motel.

Most everyone knows that Room 32 at the Alta Cienega Motel on the northwest corner was the main place Jim Morrison lived from 1968 until he died in 1971 in Paris. But how many know that The Doors’ offices, where manager Bill Siddons handled day-to-day-operations, were less than a block away at 8512 Santa Monica Blvd.? Or that the band recorded three of its six albums featuring Morrison at a sound studio on site and at another just couple of blocks away?

If Los Angeles was the center of The Doors’ universe, then West Hollywood was home to many of the worlds where band members worked, lived and often played.

The group’s offices on Santa Monica Boulevard housed a lower level rehearsal studio they called The Doors Workshop. That’s where they recorded the entire “L.A. Woman” album released in 1971, according to “The Doors Guide to LA,” a website created by keyboardist Ray Manzarek and guitarist Robby Kreiger.

The lower level bathroom, oddly enough, served as the vocal booth for Morrison to lay down his vocals for the album. A plaque in front of the building still commemorates the former site of The Doors Workshop and the place where “L.A. Woman” was recorded.

A young Danny Sugarman began working at the band’s offices answering fan mail in the late 1960s, eventually taking over as manager in 1972 following Morrison’s death. Since its days as The Doors Workshop, the building has changed ownership quite a few times. An Italian restaurant, Benvenuto Café, operated there in the early 2000s, followed by Mexico restaurant. The most recent tenant was L’ Scorpion, a tequila lounge and bar that closed in 2015.

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The Doors offices and Workshop were ideally situated for Morrison – they were just a hop, skip and jump away from The Palms, the (now closed) lesbian bar at 8572 Santa Monica. During breaks in rehearsal and recording sessions, Morrison would walk next door to eat a little and drink a lot of beer and whiskey. Others might do the same, too, if they had to make a living by singing in a toilet.

Two other albums – “Soft Parade” and “Morrison Motel,” released in 1969 and 1970, respectively – were recorded at Elektra Sound Recorders, a state of the art studio the record company built a short walk away at 962 N. La Cienega.

Jim Morrison, the doors
The Doors recorded two albums at 962 N. La Cienega Blvd., formerly Elektra Sound Recorders and now home to Electric Entertainment.

Elektra recording artists Judy Collins, Roxy Music, Carly Simon, the Stooges and Harry Chapin, among many others, also cut albums in the same studio in the late 1960s and early 1970s. That building too has undergone several changes in ownership, previously also housing Asylum Records and Intersound Inc. and currently is home to Electric Entertainment.

As nearly all Doors fans know, Morrison’s lived with his girlfriend,  Pamela Courson. In the late 1960s, he purchased a boutique for her that she named “Themis.” The store sold women’s fashions from around the world and became a popular hangout for their friends. It was located at 947 La Cienega Blvd. in the current Mahin Rugs building.

Morrison’s experimental film, “HWY: An American Pastoral,” was produced in another part of the same building by Frank Lisciandro, Paul Ferrara and Babe Hill. Shot in Direct Cinema style during the spring and summer of 1969 in the Mojave Desert and in Los Angeles, the complete 35 mm, movie-quality film has yet to be released commercially, apart from select excerpts used in the 2009 documentary “When You’re Strange.” The full video is available on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ojURx4Zdqc.

When it came time to play, the neighborhood could be quite accommodating. Morrison, as well as those in many other bands, reportedly were quite familiar with The Phone Booth at 8505 Santa Monica Blvd., and The Extension directly across the street at 8500 Santa Monica Blvd. Those businesses were historic in their own particular right – the first was a strip club next door to the Alta Cienega Motel that most readers might remember as Leo’s Flowers, while the other was a topless bar that’s a familiar site today as Al & Ed’s Autosound.

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Lon Rains
Lon Rains
6 years ago

WeHo is going to miss you Bob. This another great article. I never get tired of them

John Dee
John Dee
6 years ago

Bring back strip clubs & topless bars. I’m all for them. And some both girl & boy go go dancers. Put some life back into dullsville. BTW it’s unfortunate that so many good things were destroyed & that sinfully nasty little dump motel on La Cienega & S.M. stays like a plague. It’s neighborhood vermin

Joshua88
Joshua88
6 years ago

Great article!
Second Larry Block re Hank.

Larry Block
Larry Block
6 years ago

Thanks Hank for bringing us Wehoville…. you’re our small town home paper!

Michael
Michael
6 years ago

Great article. Terrific WeHo history!

Creative One
Creative One
6 years ago

Wasn’t the building where Flaming Saddles/Eleven is a famous recording studio as well? Are any left on Santa Monica Blvd?

jeromecleary
6 years ago

Great article. Here’s my article about the night Jim Morrison visited me in West Hollywood: https://patch.com/california/westhollywood/my-personal-visit-with-jim-morrison

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