The List

3 Songs From 1967 That Secretly Feature Mind-Blowing Lyrics

In the mood for some mind-blowing lyrics from some psychedelic delights from 1967? That year was such a solid one for songwriting. And while many songs released during that era were psychedelic in nature and involved the use of certain substances, they arenโ€™t all just odes to mind-altering drugs. In fact, quite a few songs released that year have some fascinating lyrics with mind-bending themes. Letโ€™s take a look!

โ€œThe Endโ€ by The Doors

โ€œPaid a visit to his brother, and then he / He walked on down the hall, and / And he came to a door / And he looked inside / โ€˜Father?โ€™ โ€˜Yes, son?โ€™ โ€˜I want to kill youโ€™ / โ€˜Mother? I want toโ€ฆโ€™โ€

Videos by American Songwriter

Much of Jim Morrisonโ€™s lyrical work was poetic, but few got as Oedipal and existential as โ€œThe Endโ€ from The Doorsโ€™ self-titled 1967 album. On the surface, this song shocked people for its use of Oedipal references, such as the line mentioned above. However, the more you listen to this song and absorb the lyrics, the more it becomes clear that this song could mean just about anything. 

An incestuous obsession? Perhaps. Ego death? Sure. The loss of a lover? Maybe. Even Morrison himself said that the song was โ€œsufficiently complex and universal in its imagery that it could be almost anything you want it to be.โ€ Now thatโ€™s great songwriting.

โ€œWhite Rabbitโ€ by Jefferson Airplane

โ€œWhen logic and proportion / Have fallen sloppy dead / And the White Knight is talking backwards / And the Red Queen’s off with her head / Remember what the Dormouse said / Feed your head! / Feed your head!โ€

This might just be one of the most beloved psychedelic songs of the Summer of Love in 1967. Most people associate the vivid, magical lyricism with psychedelic drug use. Thatโ€™s obviously a big part of the song and Grace Slickโ€™s music as a whole. But โ€œWhite Rabbitโ€ isnโ€™t just some ode to LSD. Rather, itโ€™s a critique of society that begs the listener to question the powers that be and to start thinking deeply about whatโ€™s truly going on around them. Slick implores the listener to feed their head, after all.

โ€œThe Red Telephoneโ€ by Love

โ€œThey’re locking them up today / They’re throwing away the key / I wonder who it will be tomorrow, you or me?โ€

On a musical level, this psychedelic pop song is so good that many listeners didnโ€™t really take the time to sit with the lyrics. But once you do, this 1967 songโ€™s mind-blowing lyrics start to really make sense. โ€œThe Red Telephoneโ€ is an incredibly philosophical and borderline apocalyptic exploration of things like death, race, prison systems, etc. It really reflects the uneasy mood at the time, when the Vietnam War raged on, everyone was on drugs, and the balance between joy and anxiety was a hard one to balance.

Photo by Sulfiati Magnuson/Getty Images