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The Doors – When The Music's Over Lyrics 14 years ago
I always loved this song since I first heard it. I'm a huge fan of music and it's really helped me through some rough times when I was alone, so I obviously related strongly to the song because of the chorus (and of course I loved Ray, John and Robby's performances as always). I liked the verses, but I hadn't really interpreted it from the author's point of view. And so here it is, sorry if it's too long.



When the music's over,
When the music's over, yeah
When the music's over,
Turn out the lights, turn out the lights, turn out the light

Well the music is your special friend
Dance on fire as it intends
Music is your only friend
Until the end
Until the end
Until the end


This is the driving point of the song. The music is a metaphor not for life itself, but for all the things that make life worth living. So while those things are your special friend, your only friend, when they're over you should just turn out the light, because there's nothing left to live for. I think Jim used music to represent this because (besides the obvious fact that they were musicians) it was his passion, it was one of the few remaining things that made life worth living for him. Unfortunately, eventually even music didn't do that for him anymore, and the lights went out.
The "Dance on fire" line is saying that all those things that make life worth living are the same things that make you want to dance. Of course they do more than just that, but he uses dance as the metaphor because it's in relation to the music. The 'music' makes you want to 'dance.' All the great things in life make you want to dance, love, laugh, "specialize in having fun." When the music's over and you're waiting for your lights to turn out, you don't want any of those things anymore.


Cancel my subscription to the Resurrection
Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside


He doesn't want to reincarnate when this life is over, he wants his soul to rest in the "House of Detention," which would be literally interpreted as a resting place for souls, because they're keeping themselves 'detained.'


The face in the mirror won't stop
The girl in the window won't drop
A feast of friends, alive, she cried
Waiting for me outside


I don't know how to interpret exactly what Jim was conveying here, but I do know that this is what's happening in the House of Detention as his friends are there waiting for him. He's not willing to join them yet.


Before I sink into the big sleep,
I want to hear, I want to hear
The scream of the butterfly


Jim isn't quite ready to turn out the lights, call it quits on life and join his friends in the House. He still needs to experience some things before he's ready to leave. The butterfly may represent rebirth, or maybe it's just used as a strong (and creepy) visual, since it's perhaps the last animal on Earth you would expect to scream. After he says "The scream, of the butterfly," you can hear Ray play a trippy bit on the keyboard. I interpret this as the butterfly's scream.
Note: I've heard about how it's a sexual/pornographic reference, but Jim picked up all sorts of random stuff that made they're way into his writings, so the context in which he came across the phrase isn't necessarily the context in which he used it. Personally I think it has really strong imagery, I have no idea how it could be used as a title for a porn movie.


Come back, baby, back into my arm
We're getting tired of hangin' around,
Waitin' around with our heads to the ground
I hear a very gentle sound
Very near yet very far
Very soft yet very clear
Come today, come today


Now that he's heard the scream and experienced what he needed to experience, he feels like he's ready for death. He's "tired of hanging around" with his "ear to the ground." It's a perfect metaphor for death, especially when using music as a similar, yet opposite, metaphor. When you're listening for sounds with your ear to the ground, you're listening for low-pitched sounds, like how hunters track herds, but they're hard to pinpoint. Jim hears the gentle rumbling of death, it seems both near and far, he can only hear it softly, but for him it's as clear as day (after all, he was pretty much obsessed with death). He's tired of life here, it's running him down, taking his spirit. His music is over.


What have they done to the earth, yeah
What have they done to our fair sister
Ravaged and plundered, and ripped her and bit her
Stuck her with knives in the side of the dawn
And tied her with fences and dragged her down


The longer he stays here without the music, the more it gets to him. Understandably, our legacy on this planet seems to be driving the author mad. All he can see now is the negative.


I hear a very gentle sound,
With your ear down to the ground
We want the world and we want it,
We want the world and we want it now
Now
Now


Again, waiting for death. This time, death finally comes to release him. This part of the song is still a toss-up for me but this is my interpretation: Notice when Jim says "We want the world and we want it..." he alters his voice, and it overlaps with the next line. I think those lines are Death's, and 'they' say that because, by their nature, they have an insatiable appetite for death and destruction, they want to destroy the whole world. It's probably also in part a reference to the last few lines talking about man-made destruction of the planet, perhaps alluding to humans being a destructive animal, or even death-incarnate. Whatever the meaning of those two lines, the song crescendos here, meaning Jim has finally been taken, to rest in eternity with his friends in the House of Detention.


Persian night, babe
See that light, babe
Save us, Jesus, save us


I think these are his take on the thoughts and feelings one experiences upon death.


So when the music's over,
When the music's over yeah
When the music's over,
Turn out the lights, turn out the lights, turn out the light

Well the music is your special friend
Dance on fire as it intends
Music is your only friend
Until the end
Until the end
Until the end



Now we have a clearer picture of what he meant in the chorus: This entire song is a plea to Death. He's asking Death to turn out his lights when his music's over.

Sorry to the mods and to everyone else if this is too long, but I felt this song deserves it. One of my all-time favorites, RIP Jim.

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