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The Story Behind CD Krishna
Ken Pellman, a novice musician (who later became a marvelous
friend) had asked me to teach him harmonium. Ken, as
it turned out, had been a devotee of Meher Baba for
many years. When I asked him what he wanted to learn,
he said he wanted to learn chanting. We tried a few
chants from various traditions until one day I asked
him who his favorite deity was. "Krishna,"
was the answer.
I immediately taught him all the Hare Krishna chants I
knew, and in only a couple weeks I had completely exhausted
my repertoire of chants simple enough for a beginner
to play. The solution was to write new ones. So, each
week, I wrote him a new chant. I taught him the melody
and recorded a 30 minute cassette so he could sing with
it in his car. The cassettes I made for Ken are the
tracks of CD Krishna.
When the Universe wants you to do something, there really
is no way around it. I was personally a little uneasy
with the Krishna chanting, especially "Hare Krishna
Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare." I had
never taken to the Hare Krishna movement, even though
I myself had lived in a similar ashram for 15 years.
In fact, I was a little scared of the mantras.
Making a 30 minute cassette of Krishna chanting required a
bit of set-up, quite a bit of composing, and even more
time recording. I added background vocals and overdubbed
bass tracks. Which meant, in short, that I was spending
a good portion of every week immersed in these chants.
I didn't feel overworked, I felt simply marvelous. It
was a drunken bliss, and I couldn't get enough. Chants
and mantras to the Great Krishna entered my day, my
meditations, my dreams. I got high.
I'm not really sure how I ended up in the studio tracking
CD Krishna. I booked 2 days in a studio and we recorded
onto a single 8-track ADAT. There was no pre-production.
I just arrived at the studio and started playing. In
my increasing bliss, I had actually forgotten how some
of the songs were supposed to go. My brain had ceased
to function in the manner I was accustomed. My heart
had started to open. The correctness of melody paled
next to the energy I had tapped into.
I invited a handful of chanting friends to join me for
tracking response vocals. It had to be the most magical
set of evenings - so much love and support. It was my
first experience joining together with people from various
traditions. What a gift.
Seva
mixed and mastered this project from Knoxville, TN.
(Seva helped found and develop WAVES technology, which
made him famous in the technical world). When I told
him I wanted a dub version of one of the songs, he just
chuckled. (He knows my love of reggae) Seva chose Gopala
Hare. He took the harmonium tracks and connected
them to the tabla tracks, so that every time the tabla
played the harmonium would trigger. The result was a
goofy sort of reggae rhythm, perfect for the project.
Add some delay vocals. Dub Version.
Immersed in the subtle energy of this project, I was able to
open my heart a little more. Heal some old wounds. Soften
some of my harder edges. The CD reflected everyone's
willingness to embrace a divine energy of love.
Om Shanti
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