The song was written by CCR's lead singer, guitarist, and songwriter,
John Fogerty. It was included on their 1970 album ''Cosmo's Factory'', the group's fifth album. The song's title and lyrics, as well as the year it was released (1970), have led many to assume that the song is about the
Vietnam War. The fact that previous Creedence Clearwater Revival songs such as "
Fortunate Son" were protests of the
Vietnam War added to this belief. In a 2016 interview, though, Fogerty explained that the song is actually about the proliferation of guns in the United States. The song's opening and closing both featured jungle
sound effects created by, according to the band's bassist
Stu Cook, "lots of backwards recorded guitar and piano."
Record World called the single with "Up Around the Bend" a "two-sided monster".
Cash Box said that the double-sided single "takes the act out of its sustained bag of either
Little Richard or 'bayou-tagged' music", but that compared to "Up Around the Bend", this song "presents a less-removed glimpse of the familiar Creedence."
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Bryan Wawzenek rated the lyrics of "Run Through the Jungle" as Fogerty's eighth-greatest, saying, "Fogerty has written many songs cloaked in ominous foreboding...But the danger in the song feels just a little more imminent, especially when you’ve got Satan on your tail." ==Controversy==