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Saturday, August 12, 2023

Not the Same Old Song - Part 33

Light My Fire

Light My Fire was a 1967 hit by The Doors, written by guitarist Robby Krieger and sung by Jim Morrison.  I previously showed a short clip from the video above in a post about fire dancing.  Here's a slightly longer version of the fire dancing video paired with the closing portion of the song Light My Fire.  I call this my R-rated version, though the frontal nudity is really rather innocent, so perhaps this should be rated PG.

But the original Light My Fire was much longer, over 7 minutes.  So, for your enjoyment, here's my X-rated version of the whole song, paired with extracts from with a Corbin Fisher video of Harper and Dawson doing it by a fireplace.  It's better if you watch it full-screen.

A shorter single version of Light My Fire was released to play on the radio.  That version cut out almost all the instrumental section in the middle of the song.  But that instrumental section, which is pure jazz improvisation, is what makes the song.  It's a brilliant fusion of rock and jazz.

Which of my videos do you like best?

5 comments:

Big Dude said...

Wow! It doesn't get more unashamed than this. I kinda pegged you for aiming at being like VMM, not even showing hard cocks...but there were a couple stills of blowjobs and fucking that made me start to wonder. Now...as they said in the 60s...RIGHT ON!!! I admire your openness. THANKS!

Unashamed Male said...

@Big Dude - As I’ve said before, I never post porn.  What, never?  To quote from Gilbert and Sullivan's HMS Pinafore:

What, never?
No, never.
What, never?
Well, hardly ever!

Anonymous said...

Just beautiful

Richard Ryan said...

I loved this. Thank you!

BatRedneck said...

I hadn't listened to this song in years!
I think I hardly watched what these boys were doing :-) for I was caught by the first notes of that distinctive electric piano that instantly made me reach for my headphones and dive into the music. And I fully agree with you: this song is all about its central instrumental part, like a statement to which Morrison's lyrics are both an introduction and a conclusion.
Thank you Larry.