Authors: Dylan Jones
It might be Morrison's birthday, but today is pretty much the same as any other at Père-Lachaise. There are no TV crews, no huge groups of worshippers â only the odd tourist, a few tokens of remembrance and the inevitable litter. Hugh, a student from Bristol, is disappointed. âI thought there'd be more people here,' he says. âI'm a big fan of Jim's, and I thought his other fans would be here too.' He arrived from Britain this morning, and will be leaving later this afternoon. It's his first time in Paris, and he won't be visiting anywhere else â âWhat's the point? This is what I came for.'
Janette Cutter is from Connecticut, and her two-month tour of Europe is just beginning. âI'm here with a bunch of college friends. When we decided to come, Jim Morrison's grave was the one thing which we all had to see. It was our only definite plan.'
Today is also her birthday â her twenty-first â and she's giving Morrison the bunch of red roses given to her this morning. âI think he's so cool, you know? I like his poetry, I have his poem books, and I thought it would be a neat thing to come today, because it's our
birthday. I'd read about the grave before, but it's kinda disgusting. I met someone last night whose father's buried near here, and he hates the graffiti on his grave. It says âJim this way', and he's kinda offended by that.'
The tourists come and go, carrying the ubiquitous accessories for sightseeing in Paris: cameras and bottles of Evian. A look of disappointment tends to cross their faces when they appear at the grave. Paris's fourth most popular tourist attraction is certainly an underwhelming sight. Being a Saturday, tomorrow will be busier, and Jackie will be here. Forty-year-old Jackie comes every Saturday, at 11 a.m., to clean and to tidy the grave. She brings a bottle of champagne or Jim Beam, and sits on a nearby stone, talking to herself in her quiet Parisienne voice, ignoring those around her.
Jackie, and others like her, is one of the people Michelle Campbell sees here regularly. Michelle, an American in her mid-thirties, has been photographing Père-Lachaise cemetery every day since January, a personal project which she hopes to have published. âI was here for the anniversary of his death in July, and it was crazy. There were about fifty of these really drunk German fans, singing at the top of their voices. That's when the obsessives come out of the woodwork.
âEarlier in the year they had five guards around the grave all day, though they let up in the summer. Sometimes they try and hide the grave, or tell people
he's not buried here anymore. They hate the mess, and the graffiti. They really wish he was gone.'
At four o'clock the day draws to a close. The wind pushes the leaves through the pathways and the avenues in between the graves, like a cheap effect in a pop video. It's time to go. There is nothing more to see. Tomorrow, the next day, and the day after that, more people will arrive. Some will pass by in minutes, while others will moon about the dead dark star, dressed from head to toe in black, paying homage to the original rock and roll wastrel, hoping some of Morrison's stardust falls their way.
As Michelle turns to go, she beckons me over: âI was here in August, and this American guy turns up with his two young daughters. One of them asks him why a Traveling Wilbury is buried in France. On being told that Morrison wasn't in the band, she says, “You mean this isn't Roy Orbison?” I think it was the only dead rock star she knew. Another time, there were these American college students here, and this one girl says, at the top of her voice, “Wow, what a concept of death. He coulda had any stone he wanted, he was rich, man, and look at what he chose. What a concept.”'
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Articles from:
RAM
,
Cheetah
,
Crawdaddy
,
Creem
,
Dark Star
,
Doors Quarterly
,
Eye
,
Guardian
,
Keyboards and Music Player
,
Los Angeles Free Press
,
Melody Maker
,
Newsweek
,
New York
,
New York Times
,
Passion
,
Record Mirror
,
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,
Time
,
Village Voice
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The Doors in Europe
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With thanks to Ed Victor, Nigel Newton, Jonathan Newhouse, Karl Badger, Max Bell, Maurice Boland, Gordon Burn, Robert Christgau, Nik Cohn, Nicholas Coleridge, John Densmore, Robin Derrick, Pamela Des Barres, Jeff Dexter, Tony Elliott, Danny Fields, Kathryn Flett, Steve Harris, Jerry Hopkins, Alice Howarth, Nick Humphrey, Terry and Tricia Jones, David Keeps, Patricia Kennealy-Morrison, Nick Kent, Robby Krieger, Nick Logan, Christian Logan Wright, Ray Manzarek, Jim McClellan, Haoui Montaug, Lisa Nesselson, Lee Ellen Newman, The New York Public Library, Tony Parsons, Tony Peake, John Peel, David Reynolds, Helen Ridge, Alix Sharkey, Stephanie Sleap, Neil Spencer, Danny Sugerman, James Truman, John Williams, and to Sarah, Edie, Georgia, Audrey and Mike.
Â
Elvis Has Left the Building: The Day the King Died
The Eighties: One Day, One Decade
From The Ground Up: U2 360° Tour Official Photobook
When Ziggy Played Guitar: David Bowie and Four Minutes That Shook the World
The Biographical Dictionary of Popular Music: From Adele to Ziggy, the Real A to Z of Rock and Roll
British Heroes in Afghanistan
(with David Bailey)
Cameron on Cameron: Conversations with Dylan Jones
Mr. Jones' Rules for the Modern Man
iPod Therefore I Am: A Personal Journey Through Music
Meaty, Beaty, Big & Bouncy: Classic Rock and Pop Writing from Elvis to Oasis
Sex, Power & Travel: Ten Years of Arena
Ultra Lounge: The Lexicon of Easy Listening
Paul Smith: True Brit
Haircults: Fifty Years of Styles and Cuts
16
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