Peace of Mind may refer to:
In music:
This album is Kottonmouth Kings' self-titled album, Kottonmouth Kings released on May 31, 2005. The album is also known as "No.7" because of it being the seventh full-length album.
The album peaked #50 on the Billboard 200, #21 on Top Rap Albums, #2 on Top Independent Albums, #50 on Top Internet Albums, and #50 on Billboard Comprehensive Albums.
(*) indicates Japanese Release Only
Peace of Mind (German:Reserve hat Ruh) is a 1931 German film directed by Max Obal and starring Fritz Kampers, Lucie Englisch and Paul Hörbiger.
The film's sets were designed by the art director Jacek Rotmil.
"Peace of Mind" (also known as "The Candle Burns") is the name given to a song of unknown origin that was attributed to The Beatles on bootleg albums starting in 1973. The recording has the sound quality of a home-produced demo, and was reportedly recovered from a trash container at Apple Corps headquarters in 1970. As no copyright, claim of ownership, recollection, or documentation about the song has ever been uncovered, its connection with the Beatles remains speculative.
The recording was reported to have been "found in the Apple trash can in 1970." The song first appeared as "Peace of Mind" on vinyl bootlegs of Beatles material in 1973, including Peace of Mind and Supertracks, both issued by ContraBand Music. Over the next decade it was included on more than a dozen bootlegs, sometimes using the title "The Candle Burns".
In the 1975 Beatles discography All Together Now, the song was classified as a Beatles studio outtake from mid-1967 with "intriguing lyrics woven around very complicated beat changes." Later speculation suggested that it was a demo made at home, presumably by John Lennon with George Harrison and possibly Paul McCartney, using a Brenell tape recorder that each Beatle owned. The recording date has been placed as early as 1966 (reflecting the early psychedelia of some Revolver songs) or as late as 1968 (based on similarities to the guitar style on "Dear Prudence"). If the lyrics are interpreted as describing an LSD experience, the phrase "lately has been banned" places the song's origin no earlier than August 1966 when LSD became a prohibited drug in Britain.
Turn me down
To the ground
I want to feel the coolness on my face
Lie me down
Show me how
I can begin to hold you endlessly
I don't sleep
So I don't dream of leaving
And when I wake I face the night
And I don't speak
I listen to the breathing
I sometimes think I hear my fate
So is it any wonder
That I'm finding someone in this place here next to me
And is it any wonder
That we found each other
I've found another who meets the same
Is it any wonder
Don't explain by it's name
We write our words forever in the space
Who could say
Chance again
Chooses to bring together you and me
Now I don't sleep so I don't dream of leaving
I lie awake and face the night
I lie awake and dream of you
So is it any wonder
that I'm finding someone in this place here next to me
And is it and wonder that you made it here
We found another who meets the same
And is it any wonder that I'm finding someone in this place here next to me
Is it any wonder
that we found each other
We found another who meets the same