Live On Earth

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (57 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK // LIVE

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 142:00

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Mossy said it best!

alorinna

When I'm stressed, I reach for this. I can't top Mossy's review, so I'll just say "you said it!"

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His Best Work

Sort

You've stumbled across the outcome of an Indian guru who barely talks shouting, "Sing!" at Krishna Das. These two CDs, especially the second, catch hold of Spirit in the moment and clicks so deeply that even listening to a recorded version of it years later still brings you Present.

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Feel the joy and do it anyway!

mossy

This guy is EXACTLY the kind of rabble-rouser that Senator McCarthy warned you about. He and his band of merry go-go girls will have your heart chakra blown wide and open and you'll be dancing around the kitchen like a demented dervish by the time you hit track 2. His treatment of the classic 'Hanuman Chaleesa' segues into 'Sita Ram' and you can feel every hair on your body stand on end. Krishna Das brings a decidely western feel to this, which some may wince at as not being any kind of compliment, but just listen to the way he builds and assuages tension - this guy & his groupies will have you like putty in their hands. In a world of angst, pain and bitter-sweet music, this is a God-send.

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Jay Jay Krishna Das!

Swami

This is my favorite release of his by far. Amazing. If you like to chant kirtans, or just listen along, then this is your cup of tea!!!!

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Great Kirtan

Jofish

Krishna Das is one the best Kirtan singers out there. Try the Hanuman Chalesa as an intro to his work.

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Amazing

saad

Beautiful voice. Nice background posse and instruments.

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They Say All Media Guide

Considered the leading Western proponent of kirtan chanting, Krishna Das shows his stuff on the double-disc Live on Earth. The live setting is where Das really shines, with posse in tow generally singing in the traditional call-and-response fashion. Devotion flows through his husky baritone voice and enthusiasm abounds in the claps of the group. This is how these mantras are meant to be sung, their blessings showering down on every chanter. The explosive “Radhe Shyam” and “Samadhi Sita Ram” open the session with a bang while praising the glory of Govinda and Ram along with their consorts, Radha and Sita. Then, a hush falls and stillness overwhelms when Das and bansuri flutist Steve Gorn offer themselves at the feet of the guru with “Shri Guru Charanam.” Going on like this, balancing the ecstatic and the solemn while holding the sacred, Das makes his offerings to all of the major Hindu deities — Krishna, Hanuman, Kali, Lakshmi, Rama, and Shiva. Particularly enchanting is the ancient hymn “Hanuman Chaleesa.” Das sings it to please his own guru, though it was composed in honor of the monkey god Hanuman, noble hero of the great Indian epic Ramayana. One of the most well-known nama sankirtanas in the West repeats the names of Hare Rama Hare Krishna. Das includes two different renditions, “Three Rivers Hare Krishna” and “Mountain Hare Krishna,” perhaps signifying his own fondness for the simple beauty of this chant. For the most part, Das sticks with the tried and true Indian instrumentation of harmonium and percussion to create his sound, though he does add a bit of keyboard, cello, and bass to smooth out the edges and truly make it his own. That’s fair, and the result is splendid. – Kelly McCartney

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