THE DOORS : 30 YEARS COMMEMORATIVE EDITION

    Live At The Hollywood Bowl (1987)
  1. When The Music's Over
  2. Alabama Song (Whiskey Bar)
  3. Back Door Man
  4. 5 To 1
  5. Moonlight Drive
  6. Horse Latitudes
  7. The Celebration Of The Lizard (A Little Game / The Hill Dwellers)
  8. Spanish Caravan
  9. Light My Fire
  10. The Unknown Soldier
  11. The End
    Dance on Fire (1985)
  12. Break On Through
  13. People Are Strange
  14. Light My Fire
  15. Wild Child
  16. L.A. Woman
  17. The Unknown Soldier
  18. Roadhouse Blues
  19. Texas Radio And The Big Beat / Love Me Two Times
  20. Touch Me
  21. Horse Latitudes / Moonlight Drive
  22. The End
  23. Crystal Ship
  24. Adagio
  25. Riders On The Storm
    The Soft Parade - A Retrospective (1991)
  26. The Changeling
  27. Wishful Sinful
  28. Wild Child
  29. Build Me A Woman
  30. The Unknown Soldier
  31. The Soft Parade
  32. Hello I Love You
    Bonus :
  33. Break On Through
  34. The Ghost Song

Label : Universal

Release Year : 2001

Venue : The Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, California, USA + various locations

Recording Date : July 5, 1968 + 1969

Released : 1999

Running Time : 185 minutes

NTSC : 4:3

Review (Wikipedia) : The Doors 30th Anniversary Collection is a music compilation DVD by the American rock band the Doors, released in 1999 and 2001. It compiles three films previously released by MCA/Universal Home Video: Live at the Hollywood Bowl (1987), Dance on Fire (1985) and The Soft Parade - A Retrospective (1991). Live at the Hollywood Bowl (62 min) is a Doors' concert filmed live at the Hollywood Bowl in the summer of 1968. Dance on Fire (65 mins) is a collection of promotional clips, live concert performances, TV appearances and rare behind-the-scenes film footage. It was directed by keyboardist Ray Manzarek and includes 14 songs one of which is a short film by Manzarek backed by the song "L.A. Woman". The Soft Parade - A Retrospective (48 mins) includes previously unreleased band performances, interview footage and the Doors' last televised appearance on PBS in 1969 (in the aftermath of Jim Morrison's arrest arrest and later trial for indecent exposure).