Behind The Song

This 1969 Doors Hit Had a Different Title Based on a Card Game, but Jim Morrison Changed It Because It Was Too Violent

The last Top 10 hit The Doors had before the death of Jim Morrison could have had a much different feeling and title if Morrison hadnโ€™t gotten his way. โ€œTouch Meโ€, which the band released on their 1969 album, The Soft Parade, was a Robby Krieger composition originally inspired by the card game blackjack, in which the dealer โ€œhitsโ€ the player with new cards.

Thus, Krieger originally wanted to call the song โ€œHit Meโ€. Lines like โ€œCโ€™mon, hit me, Iโ€™m not afraid,โ€ had a totally different meaning in this first version. โ€œI wrote it about a game of blackjack we were playing in Hawaii,โ€ Krieger recalled to Uncut in 2026. โ€œBut Jim really didnโ€™t like the idea.โ€

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Krieger said that Morrison was worried โ€œHit Meโ€ would incite violence. โ€œHe thought people might actually come on stage and hit him,โ€ Krieger said. And you knowโ€”Morrison was probably right to be worried about that.

Jim Morrison Had Good Reason for Opting Out of โ€œHit Meโ€

In hindsight, one can see why Jim Morrison had concerns over songs encouraging people to hit him. By the late 1960s, he had developed quite a reputation for raucous, lewd, and upsetting stage banter. Morrison nearly incited a riot during a 1967 homecoming performance at the University of Michigan, during which he repeatedly insulted and taunted the crowd. (Interestingly, this concert would serve as a major inspiration for Iggy Pop, who was in the audience at the time.)

Considering Morrisonโ€™s testy dynamic with his audiences, itโ€™s understandable why he wasnโ€™t keen on openly inviting the crowd to hit him. Because frankly, a lot of them probably would take him up on that offer. And in either case, changing โ€œHit Meโ€ to โ€œTouch Meโ€ made the song more romantic. It not only gave Morrisonโ€™s fans something to fawn over. The title change also tied into the lyrical section in which Morrison sings, โ€œNow Iโ€™m gonna love you โ€˜till the heavens stop the rain.โ€

Most importantly, it was a hit. โ€œTouch Meโ€ peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, marking the bandโ€™s last Top 10 hit. The song also topped the charts in Canada and broke into the Top 10 in South Africa and New Zealand.

โ€œI sometimes wonder what would have happened if we called it โ€˜Hit Meโ€™,โ€ engineer Bruce Botnick mused to Uncut. โ€œIt wouldnโ€™t have been a No. 1 record, thatโ€™s for sure. It was one of the bandโ€™s great singles, and we were still in a Top 40 world where you needed a hook and a memorable lyric.โ€

Photo by Electra Records/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images