• Music
Robby Krieger's slinky, haunting guitar lines over D drone in DADGAD tuning using a harmonic minor scale recall Indian drone and raga-based music, as has often been noted, and the rolling and dramatic crescendoes of John Densmore's drums recall Indian tabla rhythms. The music as a whole, though, does not sound entirely or even particularly "Indian". The sharp, ringing edge of the guitar recalls the 50s rock and roll style, while the fingerpicking attack may derive equally from the flamenco guitar style Krieger had studied as a youth and from folk music. Ray Manzarek's organ is used sparingly to provide an inconspicuous bass line (I-V-I-V-I-V...) and fills. One may find a strong similarity to Chopin's "Funeral March" theme and also to Sandy Bull's guitar instrumental "Blend" - but this may be more to do with the quality of the melodic minor scale than with any specific influence.
Structurally, the song rises to three separate mini-crescendoes separated by slower sections of half-spoken, half-sung lyrics before building to an enormous psychedelic crescendo right after Jim Morrison sings the "meet me at the back of the blue bus" verse. Previously, the song had been weaving along on its melodies to an encounter with the ruling powers of the mind, the controlling "father" structure and the longed-for "mother", or freedom. The final crescendo represents either an attempt to break through to that freedom, or more likely, an Oedipal sexual climax. The sexual representation seems more likely given the similar crescendo apex very much along the lines of Ravel's 'Bolero". Afterward, "The End" departs on a wistful note when Morrison sings, "It hurts to set you free, but you'll never follow me. The end of laughter and soft lies, the end of nights we tried to die." In the context of Morrison's first interpretation quoted above, this lyric and the associated music that softly reiterates themes from the opening may mean that the comfort of childhood will be sacrificed for freedom.
• Lyrics
Shortly past the mid-point of the nearly 12-minute long album version, the song suddenly enters a spoken-word section with the words, "The killer awoke before dawn... " That section of the song reaches a dramatic climax with the lines, "Father/ Yes son?/ I want to kill you/ Mother, I want to... (fuck you)," (with the last two words screamed out unintelligibly). This is often considered a reference to Sophocles' Oedipus the King, a production of which Jim Morrison had worked on while at Florida State University.
Said Morrison in 1969, "Everytime I hear that song, it means something else to me. It started out as a simple good-bye song probably just to a girl, but I see how it could be a goodbye to a kind of childhood. I really don't know. I think it's sufficiently complex and universal in its imagery that it could be almost anything you want it to be." Producer Paul Rothchild said in an interview that he believed the song to be an inside trip, and that "kill the father" means destroying everything hierarchical, controlling, and restrictive in one's psyche, while "fuck the mother" means embracing everything that is expansive, flowing, and alive in the psyche. Ray Manzarek, the former keyboard player for the Doors spoke about it defensively saying,
“ He was giving voice in a rock 'n' roll setting to the Oedipus complex, at the time a widely discussed tendency in Freudian psychology. He wasn't saying he wanted to do that to his own mom and dad. He was re-enacting a bit of Greek drama. It was theatre! ”
Morrison may have been influenced by the Jungian concepts of individuation and archetypes, and was certainly influenced by Friedrich Nietzsche's concept of going beyond the limited types of human beings that hitherto existed by loving Dionysian vitality and life ("the mother") while rejecting Apollonian systems and traditions ("the father").
The lyrical reference to "the Blue Bus" has been variously conjectured to refer to either Indian mystic Meher Baba's "Blue Bus" tours of the 1930s or to Santa Monica's "Big Blue Bus" public bus lines. The link to Meher Baba seems unlikely given the dark and nihilistic tone of the song, with its references to insanity, patricide and incest, concepts alien to the life and outlook of Meher Baba. A reference to a bus line is a somewhat better possibility, but probably the most likely conjecture is that Morrison was referring to the drug numorphan (oxymorphone), an opioid substitute for morphine, which in the drug culture at the time was often referred to as "The Blue Bus" (it was available in blue 10mg instant-release tabs). Because of its highly euphoric effect Numorphan was very popular with the drug using community before it was withdrawn from the market in the 1970's. Given Morrison's well-known affinity for drug and alcohol use, and the overall "otherworldly" tenor of the song, this seems a more likely probability. The inspiring image would be that of being together with one's lover in the altered, dreamy state of consciousness induced after taking the powerful opiate-like drug. Similarly, the line "the blue bus is calling us" likely refers to the addictive attraction of oxymorphone that develops in abusers of the drug, and "driver where you takin' us" would refer, again, to the dreamy, exploratory, unpredictable state of altered consciousness experienced while under the influence of the drug.
Another explanation for "the Blue Bus" phrase would be as a reference to the blue buses that, in the United States, military inductees boarded for transport to basic training during the era of the Vietnam War, when the song was written. Morrison may have intended it to be an anti-Vietnam anthem. Morrison's father was an admiral in the U.S. Navy and as a "navy brat", he was familiar with military life; no doubt he saw many "blue buses" in his youth.a[›]
The following are phrases from "The End" that may help put the phrase "the Blue Bus" in context. The phrase "The west is the best, The west is the best, Get here, and we'll do the rest" could summon images of troops preparing for transport to Vietnam to fight in the proxy "West vs. Communist" cold war. Other phrases that could be seen as military allusions include "Lost in a Roman...wilderness of pain" and "The killer awoke before dawn, he put his boots on; He took a face from the ancient gallery." This may be the image of a soldier dressing to do battle in modern times, with an allusion toward a Roman infantryman. The phrase could also be an image of a Greek actor putting on a mask to perform in a play, except prior language implies a Roman allusion rather than one of an ancient Greek. Much of the brutal context of the song, implying random acts of killing, may make more sense in the context of war rather than in a drug trip gone bad, or the carefully prescribed plot of a Greek tragedy (cf. Oedipus). Further, the song begins and ends similarly: "This is the end, Beautiful friend; This is the end, My only friend; The end of our elaborate plans; the end of everything that stands; The end; No safety or surprise; The end; I'll never look into your eyes... again."
• Usage in film and television
The Apocalypse Now Sequence
"The End" was most famously used as a framing device for Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film Apocalypse Now, in which its dark, poetic passage marked the film's descent into the surreal. The sound of helicopter rotors from the beginning of the film are often included in recordings of the song. However, this version of the song is also incomplete, and the sounds of a jungle replace most of the lyrics in the second half of the song.
This usage has led to other, often satirical usages for the song's appearance:
* Three sequences on The Simpsons television series in which the song plays while Homer contemplates suicide and another, "Kiss Kiss Bang Bangalore", in which, in an Apocalypse Now parody, he thinks he is a god, Smoke on the Daughter, When Bart raises his head out of the pile of leg warmers in the smoke outside, the song's instrumental portion is heard, mirroring a sequence in the film Apocalypse Now.
* A Saturday Night Live sketch in which John McCain is driven to madness while campaigning for George W. Bush as a parody of Apocalypse Now.
* It was used in the final episode of The Dennis Miller Show, during another Apocalypse Now parody sequence, in which Dennis was airlifted by (we are led to believe) a helicopter out of the set.
* The song was also referenced in a 2006 episode of The Venture Bros. entitled "Assassinanny 911", in a scene which also parodied the Apocalypse Now usage, when Hank (under the influence of poison) quotes the Oedipal section of the song and tries to kill his father with a paper machete sword while a Doors-influenced score plays in the background.
* The song was parodied in an episode of Animaniacs. At the start of the episode, a voice actor sings in a Morrison-like voice, "This is the beginning... the beginning of our story...the beginning...". At the middle of the story, the word "beginning" is replaced with the word "middle". At the end of the episode he says "This is the ending...the ending of our story...the ending...the ending...the ending...the ending." and a Jim Morrison character is seen being run over by a golf cart.
* Director Martin Scorsese once used the song in a sex scene montage in his early student film Who's That Knocking at My Door (1968).
* The song was also used in Oliver Stone's 1991 film The Doors, where it plays while the band explored drugs in the desert.
• Usage in other music
* "Tiny Sick Tears", from Frank Zappa's You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 4, parodies the song's Freudian imagery, and Jim Morrison's portentous delivery;
You take a mask from the ancient hallway, and you go down, to your father's room. And you open the door, and your father, your tiny sick father, is beating his meat to a Playboy magazine -- he's got it rolled into a tube and he's got his tiny sick pud stuffed in the middle of it, right flat up against the centrefold! And you say, "Father, I want to kill y--" and he says "Not now, son, not now!"
* Nirvana parodied the song live with Kurt Cobain singing normally (although with different lyrics) and Krist Novoselic drunkenly doing improvised spoken word parts about the killer awaking in Belgium.
* In the March 1, 1997 version of the Phish song "Weekapaug Groove", recorded on Slip Stitch and Pass, vocalist Trey Anastasio starts out by indirectly quoting the Oedipal section of this song, saying, "He walked on down the hall... He said, "Father, I want to kill you... Mother... I want to cook you breakfast.... Then I wanna...I wanna borrow the car.... Then I wanna... Ooooooooooh."
* Floater, out of Portland, performs the song during their live shows in a medley with their song "Settling" from their 1998 concept album Angels in the Flesh and Devils in the Bone
* During the Zeitgeist tour, The Smashing Pumpkins used a tease of "The End" as an intro to "Silverfuck".
* Rap group Three 6 Mafia sampled this song for their song "I'm So Hi" on their album When the Smoke Clears.
* Chris Cornell, both solo recently and while fronting the grunge behemoth Soundgarden, will tag portions of "The End", among other songs, onto the breakdown of the 11+ minute long Soundgarden opus "Slaves & Bulldozers" during live performances.
* Metal group Bloodsimple sampled lines from "The End" in their song "Ride With Me".
* Norwegian Pop/Rock singer Marion Raven sampled lines from "The End" in her song, "For You I'd Die", written about Jim Morrison and girlfriend Pamela Courson. In it she sings the lines "Oh, this is the end / My only friend the end / Are words from my favorite band."
* Morrison's one-time lover Nico covered the song for her fourth album, which shared the title.
* Marilyn Manson's cover version of Five to One, also by The Doors, ends in him referencing the "Mother I want to fuck you" lyrics to close the song.
* Dirty South (House DJ) used the lyric 'This Is The End' for his song 'The End'
• Versions
While the 1967 release of the song is the best known version, there are other, slightly different versions available.
A significantly shorter edit, sometimes erroneously referred to as a "single version", was released on the Greatest Hits album. The edited version is almost half the length of the original.
The version used in Francis Ford Coppola's movie Apocalypse Now is different from the 1967 release, being a remix specifically made for the movie. The remixed versions emphasizes the vocal track at the final crescendo, highlighting Morrison's liberal use of expletives. The vocal track can partly be heard in the 1967 release, although the expletives are effectively buried in the mix.
A new 5.1 mix was issued with the 2006 box set Perception. The new 5.1 mix has more sonic details than the original 1967 mix.
While it is officially recognized that the 1967 version is an edit consisting of two different takes recorded on two consecutive days[1]—the splice being right before the "The killer awoke before dawn" line, easily pinpointed by cut cymbals—the full takes, or the edited parts, have yet to surface.
In the version recorded Live In Madison Square Garden, the controversial lyric "Mother, I want to fuck you" can be heard clearly, instead of the unintelligible screaming of the studio version.
• Notes
^ a: In one of his Vietnam War poems, William Caughly mentions a "blue bus" in relation to the military draft: "But when they called (the draft board), "I answered—no Vietnam for me, no blue bus; and I knew they'd never use the nukes—right? They just never got the chance. Day before I leave for basic training, anti-war rally in Los Angeles in front of the Century Plaza Hotel....")
"The End" was ranked at #328 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (2004).
The End
The Doors Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
This is the end, my only friend, the end
Of our elaborate plans, the end
Of everything that stands, the end
No safety or surprise, the end
I'll never look into your eyes, again
Can you picture what will be, so limitless and free
Desperately in need, of some, stranger's hand
In a desperate land
Lost in a Roman wilderness of pain
And all the children are insane
All the children are insane
Waiting for the summer rain, yeah
There's danger on the edge of town
Ride the king's highway, baby
Weird scenes inside the gold mine
Ride the highway west, baby
Ride the snake, ride the snake
To the lake, the ancient lake, baby
The snake, he's long, seven miles
Ride the snake, he's old, and his skin is cold
The west is the best, the west is the best
Get here, and we'll do the rest
The blue bus is callin' us, the blue bus is callin' us
Driver, where you takin' us?
The killer awoke before dawn, he put his boots on
He took a face from the ancient gallery
And he walked on down the hall
He went into the room where his sister lived, and, then he
Paid a visit to his brother, and then he
He walked on down the hall, and
And he came to a door, and he looked inside
Father, yes son, I want to kill you
Mother, I want to fuck you
Come on, baby
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
And meet me at the back of the blue bus
Doin' a blue rock, on a blue bus
Doin' a blue rock, come on, yeah
Fuck, fuck, ah, yeah
Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, yeah
Come on, baby, come on
Fuck me, baby, fuck, yeah
Fuck, fuck, fuck, yeah
Fuck, yeah, come on, baby
Fuck me, baby, fuck, fuck
Yeah, fuck me, do, yeah
Come on, yeah, yeah, alright
Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill
This is the end, beautiful friend
This is the end, my only friend, the end
It hurts to set you free
But you'll never follow me
The end of laughter and soft lies
The end of nights we tried to die
This is the end
The lyrics to The Doors’ “The End” are full of deeply emotional language and vivid imagery. The song speaks of the end of something significant – perhaps a relationship, a life, a dream, or even the world itself. The first stanza sets the tone with the repeated phrase “this is the end.” The end in question is of “our elaborate plans” and “everything that stands,” leaving nothing behind. There is “no safety or surprise,” only the crushing finality of an ending. The singer mourns the loss of the person he is singing to, saying, “I’ll never look into your eyes again.” The sense of finality and loss lingers throughout the song.
The second stanza paints a picture of desperation and chaos. The singer imagines a world that is “limitless and free,” yet “desperately in need” of help from “some stranger’s hand” in a “desperate land.” The phrase “lost in a Roman wilderness of pain” suggests a kind of ancient, mythic suffering that is almost too much to bear. The image of “all the children” being “insane” in this world adds to the sense of confusion and strife. There is “danger on the edge of town,” but the singer encourages his friend to take a risk and “ride the king’s highway” and “ride the snake” to a mysterious “ancient lake.”
The final stanza takes a turn towards the macabre. A killer is awake, putting on his boots and wandering through a gallery of ancient faces. He visits his sister and brother, then comes to a door and looks inside. The language becomes graphic and shocking as he tells his father, “I want to kill you” and his mother, “I want to fuck you.” The song ends with a repetition of the phrase “This is the end,” but now with a slightly different twist. It “hurts to set you free,” as the singer must relinquish a loved one, but “you’ll never follow me” into the strange, chaotic world he has described. The final lines mourn the end of something that was once full of laughter and love, even if they attempted to “die” together in those nights.
Line by Line Meaning
This is the end, beautiful friend
The end of something beautiful and significant
This is the end, my only friend, the end
The only friend due to the imminent end of something which they hold dear
Of our elaborate plans, the end
The end of well-planned actions which may have taken a long time to put in motion
Of everything that stands, the end
The end of everything that existed until this point
No safety or surprise, the end
The end will be without safety or solace, no surprises to lighten it
I'll never look into your eyes, again
There will be no more moments or opportunities to connect at the same level as before
Can you picture what will be, so limitless and free
There is a finality to what is to come, but room to imagine beyond
Desperately in need, of some, stranger's hand
The desire for a savior, despite it being unknown
In a desperate land
The environment one finds themselves in when they feel helpless and powerless
Lost in a Roman wilderness of pain
Being trapped in immense, foreign and treacherous pain as if threatened with mortality like the Sicarii, a Jewish sect who committed suicide on Masada in 73ce.
And all the children are insane
A reference to the youth of the time being crazy, rebellious and unmanageable, often causing trouble.
Waiting for the summer rain, yeah
Awaiting the season that will bring relief or meaningful change
There's danger on the edge of town
A reference to the dangers and illicit activities at the outskirts of the city
Ride the king's highway, baby
Using the highways (roads) to escape, make progress or otherwise pass through
Weird scenes inside the gold mine
Strange events or people involved in making the rich more rich
Ride the highway west, baby
Head west to find freedom, enlightenment, or make it big in the entertainment industry
Ride the snake, ride the snake
Arguably a reference to a car with snakelike exhaust pipes, but can also be interpreted as someone trying to ride the Thin White Duke, a slang term for a heroin needle.
To the lake, the ancient lake, baby
Head towards the oldest body of water in order to gain knowledge, insight or other experiences
The snake, he's long, seven miles
A warning that things ahead are long and hard
Ride the snake, he's old, and his skin is cold
Time has passed, but the situation has not improved, the driver is old and experienced but the situation is unchanging and dead
The west is the best, the west is the best
The West represents the idea that one can break free and become something more, become their best selves, which was not possible back east
Get here, and we'll do the rest
Get to a position of power or fame and the rest will fall into place
The blue bus is callin' us, the blue bus is callin' us
A call to action to hop on the Blue Bus of mystery and enlightenment
Driver, where you takin' us?
A concern about an unknown driver or activity
The killer awoke before dawn, he put his boots on
Anecdotal story about a supposed killer getting ready for his work
He took a face from the ancient gallery
The killer selected someone to kill, similar to picking someone from a gallery to be painted or sculpted
And he walked on down the hall
The killer moved towards his target
He went into the room where his sister lived, and, then he
The target was his family member instead of a stranger, even more tragic
Paid a visit to his brother, and then he
He also sought to find and kill his brother
He walked on down the hall, and
Continues separating the killer's experience
And he came to a door, and he looked inside
The killer is now closer to his objective
Father, yes son, I want to kill you
The killer confronts his father, which he wants to kill, expressing his hatred of his family and life in general
Mother, I want to fuck you
The killer has perverse and incestuous desires to have sexual relations with his mother
Come on, baby
The attempt to seduce his mother - this is a disturbing passage.
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
Trying to convince someone to join in with their vile plan
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
Repeating the enthusiasm to someone on the cusp of taking a leap into something potentially dangerous or illegal
Come on, baby, take a chance with us
Continuing to coax someone towards into something that should be avoided at all costs, repeat to convince
And meet me at the back of the blue bus
Agree to rendezvous, secretly or with a sense of danger
Doin' a blue rock, on a blue bus
Dealing/using drugs under the guise of innocently riding the bus
Doin' a blue rock, come on, yeah
Inviting others in on the drug use
Fuck, fuck, ah, yeah
Expression of sexual frustration and aggression
Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, yeah
Screaming out their frustration and sense of pleasure, the excess here is likely related to the drugs they had been using.
Come on, baby, come on
Continued attempt at seduction with some violence and aggression implied with this baiting approach
Fuck me, baby, fuck, yeah
Expressing a desire for intercourse or perhaps to get someone else in the mood for the drug use
Fuck, fuck, fuck, yeah
Another expression of sexual desire or pleasure
Fuck, yeah, come on, baby
Pushing someone towards giving in with intensity
Fuck me, baby, fuck, fuck
Repeated demand for sexual activity
Yeah, fuck me, do, yeah
Demanding fulfillment of their desire
Come on, yeah, yeah, alright
Getting others enthusiastic about the experience they are immersed in
Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill
Potential chants towards hurting someone or something
It hurts to set you free
Acknowledging the pain of having to leave something behind
But you'll never follow me
Knowing that what lies ahead is not something that others will or should endure
The end of laughter and soft lies
The end of pretending or hiding how things truly are
The end of nights we tried to die
The end of escapism and suicide attempts
This is the end
The end of all things, the finality of a path one has embarked on
Lyrics © Wixen Music Publishing
Written by: Jim Morrison, John Paul Densmore, Raymond D. Manzarek, Robert A. Krieger
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@Sadiq_Khan_UL3Z
Fun fact: this was the last song broadcasted on East German radio before the reunification of Germany
@DeezNuts-sx9jd
Could you imagine hearing this, know the ext day the country you've known for so long would come to an end? Not knowing what the future holds, but hoping for the best, but still worried.
@drmoscht5908
People from the GDR learn russian in school, so they didnt understand it anyway 🤷🏼♂️
@somewherefarfaraway9018
Nice
@szymonskowron6234
@@DeezNuts-sx9jd Man, nobody was worried, that was happyest end ever for people in east germany !!!!
@szymonskowron6234
Thats very intersting, I'm curious why russian did it.
@mischav2872
My father who recently passed told me a story on his death bed that one of his greatest memories was a doors concert. Whole room went black, a single spotlight shown down on the mic...and jim came out in skinny black jeans, no shoes, and a boa constrictor (or python probably) wrapped around him. And then proceeded to not say a word and start this is the end. Northern California in the 60s. If only I was there like him. Rip dad and jim.
@akminator130
wow thanks for sharing. may your dad find peace.
@alamanug
Gracias por hacernos revivir tan agradable experiencia que tuvo tu padre. R.I.P
@brandonknight6575
Thats frigging majestic. Im sry you lost your father. This ISN'T the end, only a mere shadow of our existence. ❤