Peace Frog

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“Peace Frog”
“Peace Frog” cover
Song by The Doors
Album Morrison Hotel
Released February 1970
Recorded November 1969
Genre Hard rock, garage rock
Length 2:49
Label Elektra
Writer Jim Morrison
Robby Krieger
Ray Manzarek
John Densmore
Producer Paul A. Rothchild
Morrison Hotel track listing
"You Make Me Real"
(3)
Peace Frog
(4)
"Blue Sunday"
(5)


"Peace Frog" is a song by The Doors which appears on the album Morrison Hotel. It was released on vinyl in February 1970 by Elektra/Asylum Records and produced by Paul Rothchild. The song blends seamlessly into the next track on the album, "Blue Sunday", so radio stations often play the two songs consecutively.[citation needed]

"Peace Frog" was originally called "Abortion Stories"; guitarist Robby Krieger gave the song its more tame title, "Peace Frog." The bloody images (There's blood in the streets, it's up to my ankles/There's blood on the streets, it's up to my knee, etc.) originated, like many songs of The Doors, from the poetry of Jim Morrison, including "Not to Touch the Earth" on the album Waiting for the Sun and "The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)" on L.A. Woman.

The line "Indians scattered on dawn's highway bleeding/Ghosts crowd the young child's fragile eggshell mind" originates from his poem, "Ghost Song," that describes an event that occurred when he was young. As Morrison described it in An American Prayer:

Me and my — mother and father — and a grandmother and a grandfather — were driving through the desert, at dawn, and a truck load of Indian workers had either hit another car, or just — I don't know what happened — but there were Indians scattered all over the highway, bleeding to death."

"So the car pulls up and stops. That was the first time I tasted fear. I musta' been about four — like a child is like a flower, his head is floating in the breeze, man.

The opening scene of Oliver Stone's movie The Doors portrays this memory of Morrison's.

The phrase "Blood in the streets in the town of New Haven" was Morrison's reference to the police in New Haven, Connecticut.[citation needed] He had been arrested there while on stage for taunting them. Since the concert was abruptly ended after Morrison's abrupt departure, a riot ensued that spilled from the New Haven Arena (since razed) into the streets.

This song was being played by many US troops during the invasion of Cambodia in 1970. The Pol Pot regime adapted the this song while it invaded Cambodia in 1975.




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