Skip to content

A Side Hustle As The Doors

Robert Rackley
Robert Rackley
2 min read
A Side Hustle As The Doors
Field Music

We all know by now that it’s getting tougher to make a living as a musician. While tools for producing music have gotten cheaper and more accessible, the ways to make decent money as a professional in the music industry have been drying up.

Alex Marshall and Joanna Yee write for the NYT about the members of acclaimed British indie act Field Music trying to pay the bills. Despite working regular jobs and playing in a band recognized by Prince, they were having trouble making ends meet. They decided they could put a few extra bones in the bank by… gigging as The Doors.

Calling themselves The Fire Doors, the group plays shows covering the music of the seminal LA band from decades ago. David Brewis and his brother Peter, who are core members of Field Music, got their start covering classic rock, but ended up playing their own music that seems like the opposite side of the rock spectrum. As they looked for ways to augment their finances, becoming a tribute band started as a joke, but became real after looking into the possibility.

David researched Britain’s tribute band circuit and found that there were already three well respected Doors acts: the Doors Alive, the Doors Rising and the Strange Doors. But he thought that Field Music’s members, along with David Hyde on drums, could recreate the band just as well, if not better.

It’s hard to listen to Field Music and imagine them doing The Doors. Brewis sounds like he’s more likely to blurt out “this is not my beautiful house” than claim to be the Lizard King. But their gambit has been successful, and fans of the classic rock band have been effusive in their praise.

• • •

The band I always pictured doing songs by The Doors was The Cult.1 Singer Ian Astbury’s Jim Morrison fixation was never far from the surface. Indeed, Astbury became the official vocalist for The Doors of the 21st Century in 2002, which featured original band members Robby Krieger and Ray Manzarek.


  1. The one band I liked in the eighth grade that I still listen to occasionally. ↩︎
Noise

Robert Rackley

Mere Christian, aspiring minimalist, inveterate notetaker, budget audiophile and paper airplane mechanic. Self-publishing since 1994.


Related Posts

Members Public

Portland Town

One of my greatest joys in 2026 has been the release of new material by British riot twee band Heavenly. I’ll admit I approached the release of this year’s brilliantly named Highway to Heavenly LP with a certain amount of skepticism. After decades of radio silence, it’s

Members Public

Hurts Like Hell

Charlotte Cornfield is the latest musician to put out something via Durham, NC’s Merge Records. Hurts Like Hell is also the first long player by the Canadian singer/songwriter since becoming a mother. The title track, “Hurts Like Hell,” wallows in a remembered sentimentality with the advantage of looking

Members Public

If You Change

Widowspeak has a new record coming this June and produced a video for the lead single, “If You Change.” I first heard the band when they covered Dire Straits’ “Romeo and Juliet,” a song that never landed with me previously. Widowspeak won me over with the wistful tenderness they gave