Review / Book Review
Robby Krieger
Set the Night on Fire: Lying, Dying and Playing Guitar with The Doors

Hachette Publishing (2021) T

Robby Krieger – Set the Night on Fire: Lying, Dying and Playing Guitar with The Doors cover artwork
Robby Krieger – Set the Night on Fire: Lying, Dying and Playing Guitar with The Doors — Hachette Publishing, 2021

Within the canon of American countercultural rock bands of the 1960s, there is hardly one that stands out more than The Doors - not merely because of their musical output but due to the controversy the trailblazing riddle hidden an enigma that was their frontman Jim Morrison embodied with his beautifully erratic and mythological persona. Formed in 1965, the core catalogue of The Doors is comprised of six flawless albums before Jim Morrison joined the 27 Club.

Having co-written most of their hits and having infused the songs with his idiosyncratic fingerstyle approach to guitar playing along with expanding the band’s horizon via his broad musical tastes, Robby Krieger is well positioned to shed light on the inner life of The Doors.

Claiming that the way Krieger reminisces about his trials and tribulations in the sixties is not exactly academic would be an understatement par excellence – au contraire, instead the book is comprised of fragmented snapshots, which carry enough ammunition to appease the dedicated The Doors fan with details about debauchery, rebellion, vandalism and drugs galore.

Following an unflinchingly honest stream-of-consciousness approach, mythmaking rock’n roll moments and humorous anecdotes are embedded in Krieger’s life story, detailing the most vital days of an infamous band.

Needless to say, the insights Krieger shares are highly interesting , especially when he debunks, corrects and relativizes what Oliver Stone portrayed as historical artifacts in his sensationalised Doors flic.

With its conversational style, Krieger not only delivers a nostalgic memoir of his time with The Doors but also sets the record straight, which is bound to delight hardcore fans as Krieger has not exactly proved to be the most outspoken constituent of the group over the years.

An insightful glimpse into 1960s counterculture and an account of a life lived less ordinarily.

7.0 / 10T • November 16, 2021

Robby Krieger – Set the Night on Fire: Lying, Dying and Playing Guitar with The Doors cover artwork
Robby Krieger – Set the Night on Fire: Lying, Dying and Playing Guitar with The Doors — Hachette Publishing, 2021

Recently-posted album reviews

1186

Histeria
Drunken Sailor (2025)

If you read enough press releases, you start questioning if you even know what genre names mean. Post-punk has been one of the most abused terms of the past 2-3 years and it seems to mean wildly different things to different people. To me, it’s always meant an ear for angular guitars and noise atop more traditional song concepts. 1186 … Read more

Li Jianhong

Shuttle Raven of the Dream
Utech (2025)

Li Jianhong's philosophy surpasses the direct relationship of a musician with their instrument of choice. Instead, Li has advocated for Environment Improvisation, where the urge to create and improvise is established by the artist's surroundings. Looking at Li's website you can find numerous instances that inspired him to settle down and start improvising, drawing energy from the surroundings. The music … Read more

Deseos Primitivos

Lineas de Muerte
Shadowplay Records (2025)

Some reviews are written after years of listening to a band and knowing nearly everything about them. Sometimes I listen to a record on repeat for weeks before I even look up the correct song titles – Deseos Primitivos (Primitive Desires) is the latter. This promo came to SPB as literally a one sentence quote about the band and its … Read more