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Heart As Wide As The World
Krishna Das
Heart As Wide As The World
Genres: International Music, New Age
 
  •  Track Listings (7) - Disc #1

As the best selling chant artist of all time, Krishna Das has sold more than 300,000 records, and continues to engage enthusiastic audiences around the world. He has headlined venues from concert halls to yoga studios for ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Krishna Das
Title: Heart As Wide As The World
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Nettwerk Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2010
Re-Release Date: 3/2/2010
Genres: International Music, New Age
Style: India & Pakistan
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 067003087827

Synopsis

Product Description
As the best selling chant artist of all time, Krishna Das has sold more than 300,000 records, and continues to engage enthusiastic audiences around the world. He has headlined venues from concert halls to yoga studios for sold out crowds of 1,500 in cities across America,throughout Europe and most recently in South America. He has been recording his popular and much-beloved CDs of devotional Indian Chants since 1996.

Renowned for making kirtan chant more accessible to Westerners, Krishna Das, has been called the "chant master of American Yoga" by The New York Times, and the "Pavarotti of Kirtan" by Yoga Journal. His groundbreaking music is energized with modern grooves and harmonies to create a soulful practice that is eminently accessible to modern hearts, while staying true to the path of Bhakti Yoga.

Heart as Wide as the World includes all brand new chants and is Krishna Das' first album recorded entirely in the studio in more than 10 years. A collaboration with acclaimed producer David Nichtern it also includes musician Jerry Marotta on drums & percussion and an array of unique instruments including the dotar, tablas,esraj and bansuri flute.
 

CD Reviews

Great singing, heart-pounding spirit --- and, now, lyrics in
Jesse Kornbluth | New York | 04/21/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"In 1967, there was no Krishna Das, just a miserable rock-and-roll kid named Jeffrey Kagel. Luckily, in 1968, Kagel met Ram Das, just back from his first trip to India. Though sworn to secrecy, Ram Das couldn't help gushing about his guru. So off Kagel went to the foothills of the Himalayas. And though he was a Jew --- "on my parents' side," he says --- he was immediately hooked by Maharaj-ji, arguably the least doctrine-obsessed spiritual guide on the planet.



This attraction makes sense. Kagel came out of the Long Island rock and culture. Maharaj-ji practiced kirtan, the Hindu equivalent of the blues, a form of call-and-response chanting. The words were the Names of God, but it didn't much matter. "Om Namah Shivaya" --- crudely translated as "I bow to Shiva" --- is not about acknowledging an external diety, but connection to the god in your self.



Kagel sang his heart out. Or, more correctly, he sang his heart open and morphed into Krishna Das. In 1973, he returned to America, thinking he'd spent his life making devotional music. Not that he was a great singer. As he says:



I have very limited capabilities on almost every level. And musically, I'm very limited in what I can do. I have a nice voice. And the voice is actually a medium for that flow, that presence. But still, from a musical point of view, it's limited.



In the mid-`80s, he began leading kirtan in public. In spiritual circles, he was an immediate sensation. His explanation:



I'm just another person who hears me chanting, you know? That's why I do it. I'm not doing it for anybody else. I'm doing it because it's my life blood. It's what I do. I recognize that so many people get benefit from it. That's wonderful. Isn't that great? But that's not why I do it.



These egoless evenings were transportation --- they took audiences inside. "Going home," it's called. That can be overwhelming; some laugh and dance, some sob. Not the sort of thing you want to do if you're determined to be unhappy.



Over the years, I had flirted with the East. I got nowhere. I was well-read and lost, your basic angry, ambitious mess. Krishna Das has said: "If you want to get rid of anger in the world, you must get rid of it in your life. If I can't even not get pissed off when someone cuts me off in a car, how am I going to change the world?" Exactly my dilemma.



In 2004, I read an interview with Krishna Das. Intrigued, my wife and I set off to an ancient hall on the Lower East Side.



The room was full, and they were serving vegan dinners and selling meditation clothes, and to say I had some attitude about all this is to understate --- the prospect of group chanting took me back to teenage beach parties when kids sat around and sang the worst song ever written, "Kumbaya."



"Welcome to Bombay Weight Loss and Kirtan," Krishna Das began. "Here you can sing and lose weight at the same time."



So he was funny. And he looked amused: close-cropped hair, wire rim glasses, a junior version of a Wilfred Brimley moustache. He picked up the harmonium. "Shree Raam Jaya Raam Jaya Jaya Raam," he sang, then we sang with him, and I wish I could build some drama here, but the thing of it was: Liftoff was immediate.



That's partly because the music is in a lower register, so it works as directly on the spine as a great bass guitar riff. It's also because 500 people singing together form an instant community, and there's nothing rarer in our culture than community. And then there's the not inconsiderable fact that this guy is totally God-obsessed --- which is magical to witness.



Time bent, then stopped. As it did, the room cooled a bit. Babies fell asleep, babies were carried out. As for vain, sophisticated, oh-so-clever me --- I shucked my brittle shell and felt my heart beat with a roomful of strangers. And in that moment, peace prevailed. It was tangible. I mean, you could feel it.



By 2009, Krishna Das had recorded 11 CDs. He'd sold 300,000 copies. He was the rock star of spiritual music --- but he was trapped in the New Age category that's so easy to mock. Maybe it was time to return to his roots as a Long Island rock-and-roller, go electric, and --- after forty years of chanting the names of god in a language his countrymen couldn't understand --- sing in English, which he has described as "historically, the language of my suffering and unhappiness."



Yeah, but how about "For Your Love" --- a `60s hit for the Yardbirds (with Eric Clapton on guitar)? It makes perfect sense:



For your love...

I'd give the moon if it were mine to give

I'd give the stars and the sun for I live

To fill you with delight

I'd bring you diamonds bright

Don't you think it would excite

If I could dream of you tonight.

For your love...



To hear electric guitar playing against tabla, Krishna Das singing those words and then slipping into chant with a chorus --- maybe it's just me, maybe it's just now, but this experience feels very important to me. There's so much I want to do in my life, if only I can get out of my way. I don't have a practice, I chant with no one, but still, I feel this music helps me do that. Odds favor it can do it for you too."
KD does it again
L. Gilbert | Philadelphia, PA USA | 03/30/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I've been chanting with Krishna Das since May 2006 and it has been quite a ride. With this CD, the devotion, the bhakti is deeper, more joyous. The chants combine Western sensibilities with the bliss, joy and heart-opening energies of the mantras.



The title track is, for me, one of the most moving chants. Krishna Das' love for his guru shines through as the simple words are sung. The first time I heard this I burst into tears at the beauty, the love that was just pouring out.



The addition of an old Yardbirds tune on "Narayanan/For Your Love" is another stroke of genius. Combining rock and roll with Sanskrit sounds odd at first - but it works here. Seeing it live brings out another dimension - the intensity of the chant can bring one to their knees.



This CD is wonderful. If you want to get to a place of joy within your heart, buy this CD. Come home to Joy."
Heart As Wide As the World
Vara | 04/03/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This Krishna Das's best work ever. Since I got the CD I have been listening to it everyday. Rest of the day these songs are ringing in my head and I find myself singing.Thanks for this great CD. Krishna Das fans, it's a must have CD."