Door Of Faith

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (44 ratings)
Door Of Faith album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 62:34

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door of faith

kkochhar

Krishna Das has been singing ancient hindu prayers and has been introducing them to west with this soulful voice. Hanuman Chalisa is praise to Lord Hanuman. It is said that if you pray to Lord Hanuman by reciting Chalisa, you get "bal"-courage, "buddhi"-intellect, "vidya"-knowledge.

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Restful but energetic

NonesuchExplorers

The best track on the album by far is "Sri Hanuman Chaleesha". It would be interesting to know what he is saying. Listeners who think of Hindi and Hindi-style singing as having a high-pitched, nasal quality will have a pleasant surprise with Krishna Das' Springsteen-like delivery.

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How deep!!

Rogee

I used the pilgrim album to do my meditatons, but this album made me change for a while, with these songs I get deeper concentration and my mind has done incledible trips to the iner senses of my soul.

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Devotional

CalStep

This is fine album.

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They Say All Music Guide

Krishna Das continues his spiritual albums, mixing Indian inflections with a Western base (which comes in the way the songs are constructed, often owing a lot to folk music). Produced by Rick Rubin, this has a wonderful, full sound with some excellent touches, like the emotional cello on “Sita’s Prayer.” It’s a very slow album — the pieces blooming gradually like flowers — intended to give its pleasure over time rather than in a single play. While this is obviously a commercial venture, it’s also a labor of love and devotion. And make no mistake, it is a truly lovely disc, accessible in its structures (in fact, “Shri Hanuman Chaleesa” would be a rock song if it had a drum kit) and its style, thanks in part to Rubin and his experience. This would be excellent as a meditation aid, but it also transcends that to become a fascinating listening experience throughout. Das sounds like Tom Waits without the voice cracks, which is no bad thing — his voice is somewhat hypnotic, as befits the music he’s making. The underlying sample (a processed voice?) on the last track adds texture to what’s really a country song in disguise, altering it completely. A record that’s an experience in every possible way. – Chris Nickson

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