On This Day

On This Day in 1967, The Doors Released This Signature Song Jim Morrison Wrote While Depressed in Los Angeles

An artistโ€™s lowest moments can sometimes produce their highest peaks of creativity, and that was certainly the case for Jim Morrison, who wrote what would become a signature Doors song while in a depressive episode in Los Angeles. Feeling wayward and lonely, Morrison took a walk up to the ridge of Laurel Canyon on the advice of his bandmates, Robby Krieger and John Densmore.

Looking down at the city from this sky-high vantage point, Morrison had a revelation about the world around him.

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Jim Morrison Wrote the Chorus to the Signature Song in Minutes

In a 2025 retrospective with Guitar World, guitarist Robby Krieger recalled Jim Morrison visiting the apartment Krieger was living in with The Doors drummer, John Densmore. โ€œHe was in one of his suicidal, downer moods,โ€ Krieger recalled. โ€œSo John said, โ€˜Come on, Jim. Weโ€™ll go see the sunset. Thatโ€™ll get you out of this.โ€™ We went up to the top of Laurel Canyon, and it was incredibly beautiful. We were looking down on the sun reflecting off the top of the clouds.โ€

This literal change in perspective changed something within Morrison, too. Suddenly, the singer said, โ€œWow! Now I know why I felt like that. Itโ€™s because if youโ€™re strange, people are strange.โ€ Thus, the title for what would become one of The Doorsโ€™ signature songs, โ€œPeople Are Strange,โ€ was born. Krieger gave Morrison some time alone on Appian Way, walking back to his apartment where he and Densmore waited for their once-sullen frontman to return. When Morrison did come back, he was a different man from the one who had been pacing the floor, lamenting about how โ€œf***ed upโ€ everything was.

โ€œHe was euphoric,โ€ Densmore recalled in his memoir, Riders on the Storm: My Life with Jim Morrison and The Doors. Morrison sang the lines to the songโ€™s chorus for his bandmates. โ€œWhen youโ€™re strange, faces come out in the rain. When youโ€™re strange, no one remembers your name.โ€ Densmore recalled Morrison saying, โ€œI feel really good about this one. It just came to me all of a sudden in a flash as I was sitting up there on the ridge looking out over the city. I scribbled it down as fast as I could. It felt great to be writing again.โ€

The Doors Knew They Had a Hit on Their Hands

The benefits of Jim Morrison writing โ€œPeople Are Strangeโ€ were, at the very least, twofold. First, the songwriting process from Morrisonโ€™s high vantage point on Laurel Canyon helped pull him out of a funk that Robby Krieger and John Densmore werenโ€™t quite sure how to handle. Morrison had a tempestuous attitude, and more often than not, the band left him to his own devices to sort himself and level out. But Morrisonโ€™s time on the canyon ridge wasnโ€™t just therapeutic. His song would become one of The Doorsโ€™ signature tunes, peaking at No. 12 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No. 1 on Canadaโ€™s RPM Top Singles chart.

As Densmore recalled in his memoir, Kriegerโ€™s ears perked up the first time he heard Morrison sing the words scribbled on his crumpled piece of paper. โ€œHe knew a hit when he heard one,โ€ Densmore wrote. โ€œThat melody has a nice hook,โ€ Krieger said.

Ultimately, everyone was right. People are strange when youโ€™re a stranger. And Morrisonโ€™s song about that fact of life, which they released on September 4, 1967, was a hit.

Photo by Edmund Teske/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images