Manzarek had been seeking treatment in Germany for bile duct cancer. He died in
Rosenheim, Germany, surrounded by his wife and brothers.
Ray Manzarek, a founding member and keyboardist of 1960s rock group
The Doors, died on Monday at a medical clinic in Germany at age 74
following a battle with cancer, the group's manager Tom
Vitorino said.
Manzarek, who lived in Northern California's Napa Valley wine country for the
past decade, had been seeking treatment in Germany for bile duct
cancer, Vitorino said. He died in Rosenheim, Germany, surrounded by his
wife and brothers.
Singer Jim Morrison and then-UCLA film student Manzarek formed The Doors in
1965 after a chance meeting at Los Angeles' Venice Beach, and Manzarek's
keyboard work would go on to be a touchstone of hits like "Break On Through to
the Other Side" and "Light My Fire."
The band, which was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993,
sold some 100 million records since its heyday with
psychedelic-era classics such as 1971's "Riders on the Storm."
Manzarek's electric organ was a defining aspect next to Morrison's booming
voice in the band's blues- and jazz-influenced take on rock and roll. "I was
deeply saddened to hear about the passing of my friend and bandmate Ray Manzarek
today," The Doors guitarist Robby Krieger said in a statement. "I'm just glad to
have been able to have played Doors songs with him for the last decade. Ray was
a huge part of my life and I will always miss him."
The Doors broke up shortly after Morrison's death from heart failure in 1971,
but their mythology exploded following the 1980 publication of the biography "No
One Here Gets Out Alive" and the 1991 film, "The Doors," by director Oliver
Stone.
The band recorded a total of eight albums between 1967 and 1972. After the
band's break up, Manzarek released two albums with the rock band "Nite City" in
the late 1970s and six solo albums, most recently "Translucent Blues" in 2011
with blues-rock guitarist Roy Rogers.
Manzarek and Krieger became locked in a legal battle with drummer John
Densmore in 2003 after the two reunited under The Doors name and later "The
Doors of the 21st Century," but were finally forced to tour as
Manzarek-Krieger.
Manzarek, who was born in Chicago in 1939, embraced old age in a 2006
interview with Reuters. "We occupy these bodies for 70, 80, 90 years, and it's
so much fun being alive on planet Earth that you want to keep this thing as
fresh as you possibly can," he said.
"The spirit, the mind, the soul, what's inside of you just gets hipper and
hipper as you get older. ... You get a whole broadened outlook on things," he
added. "That just naturally keeps going, but the damn body slows down."
Manzarek is also the author of two novels and most notably the 1998
memoir, "Light My Fire: My Life with The Doors."
Manzarek is survived by his wife, Dorothy, two brothers, a son,
daughter-in-law and three grandchildren.
RIP
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