The album's title track features Robby Krieger's electric guitar solo within a composition credited to Manzarek, Krieger, and Densmore, recorded in 1978 as newly created instrumental music to accompany Jim Morrison's spoken poetry. Krieger solos at approximately 111 bpm with a contemplative, atmospheric quality that reflects the reverential tone of the project. His guitar lines are more restrained and melodically deliberate than on the band's earlier, more aggressive recordings, favoring sustained notes and lyrical bends that create space around Morrison's words. The performance demonstrates Krieger's ability to adapt his playing to an unusual creative context, shaping his improvisation to complement rather than compete with the spoken-word elements. The track represents the emotional centerpiece of the album project, which paired Morrison's private poetry recordings with new instrumental compositions by his former bandmates seven years after his death. Manzarek's keyboards provide an ethereal wash beneath Krieger's solo, while Densmore's drumming maintains a steady but unobtrusive pulse. The overall effect is meditative and cinematic, placing Krieger's guitar in a more textural role than the hard-edged lead voice it occupied in the band's classic recordings. The performance captures the surviving Doors paying tribute to their departed frontman through carefully crafted instrumental accompaniment.