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Archive for the ‘Krishna Music’ Category

The new strange thing about Acyutananda Swami’s India LP

One of the more popular and readily available Early ISKCON Records is the India LP by Acyutananda Swami released on the Radha Krsna Productions label. I’ve been spending much of my free time recording the vinyl to digital wav files and then cleaning them up via a program called Gnome Wave Cleaner.

IndiaA couple of mysterious things about this record’s cover and original label were discovered when I first ripped it to digital in 2007. I’ll further discuss those when I post the album in a few days.

However, the new mystery about this album was discovered just recently as I was cleaning it up.

I take very good care of my records. Prior to ripping them to digital, I bathe them, allow them to dry and then dust them. This removes fingerprints, dirt, dust and static. With the exception of larger scratches in the vinyl (if they exist), my records sound like new.

But this one didn’t. This one had crackles the whole way through it. Crackles are caused by static and dust (as opposed to scratches which are caused by damage to the record itself). This record was static and dust free, so there should be zero crackling.

This really puzzled me and right as I was about to reclean the record, it dawned on me. This pressing wasn’t recorded from its master tapes, but from the first pressing of the same record.

Basically, the first pressing of the India LP was recorded from the original master tapes. When it came time for a subsequent pressing, the master tapes were not available for some reason. In order to make another pressing, they had to find a copy of the first pressing and use that as the source – crackles, pops and all.

You can actually hear crackles and pops where no dust or scratches can be seen. Also, the right channel is pretty muddy and most of the crackles live there.

IndiaI was able to remove 99% of the crackles (which were very present on both sides of the LP). Some remain, but at a rate of roughly one minute per hour, I am being driven insane.

Additionally, I thought I had recorded this record’s volume too high. I was getting distortion at the louder parts (called “clipping”). But no, my levels were just fine. When this record was recorded from the original pressing, whoever did it didn’t bother to check the levels, so there’s a bit of clipping here and there. My next job is to somehow fix that a bit. We’ll see how I do.

Usually when you rip a record to digital you try to make it sound as close to the original as possible. In this case, my digital rip sounds better. The crackles are gone and hopefully some of the clipping will be gone. It’s almost as good as the original pressing must have sounded.

Early ISKCON Records are confusing. How and when they were recorded, cataloged, released and distributed are all nearly impossible to understand. The India LP adds a level of surrealism to that confusion.

More on all of this in a few days – including the download!

Bring on the tapes! (Oh and some begging)

Sarah just returned from visiting Pennsylvania and while there, stopped at my parents’ house to retrieve the big box full of cassettes I left there thinking I wouldn’t want them.

Tapes!This box contains a bunch of classes from 1994-96 that happened at Columbus and New Vrndavana (these were recorded by me), some Krishnacore demos (Prema, 108, Bala!), a few odds and ends here and there and, most importantly, the Classic ISKCON Tapes that I wanted to rerecord, much like I’m rerecording the Classic ISKCON Vinyl.

These will be recorded, cleaned up and made available in 320kbps MP3s and FLAC files. I did all of these before, but they were saved in such low quality that I can’t even listen to them.

Also, as it was recently brought to my attention, I used the Archive’s version of KT-14 (the *amazing* San Francisco Ratha Yatra 1975) which omits a song and is encoded in the amazingly crappy 64kbps.

Remember a few years ago, the BBT/Archives released a few MP3 CD-ROMS full of a bunch of older KC music and vintage Prabhupada? Well, as nice as it seemed, it was in such a low bitrate that it’s near worthless. Sadly, KT-14 was on that disc and even sadder, I used it instead of recording it myself. I don’t remember why, but it was a dumb mistake that I’ll make up for soon.

When? That brings me to the begging portion of this blog post. Not only do I have tapes KT-1 – 20, but I also have Songs of the Vaisnava Acaryas by Acyutananda Swami and Mrdanga Lessons by Srila Prabhupada. Since they are on cassettes and I have no cassette player, getting them digitized poses a bit of a problem.

KT Series & Friends!If anyone out there has a pretty decent tape player that wouldn’t mind letting me borrow it for a spell, I could record these and send it back to you. It don’t think it would take me too long. Even doing one a day would be less than a month.

Any help would be … helpful.

*

Someone is bound to bring this up, so I’ll address it. The KT series originally ran from 1-25. I have 1 – 20, which is what was rereleased in 1995 and 1996 by the BBT. For some reason, 21-25 were never rereleased (as far as I know). They are available for download somewhere online, but the MP3s are very low quality, they are not tagged and no song titles are given. Mostly, it seems like a waste of time. Sad, because it’s some good music.

All this said, if anyone has any other early ISKCON cassettes and would like me to convert them to digital, please let me know. Golden Avatar had a series that wasn’t so good, but would be fun to preserve. Also, I remember something called “The Hare Krishna Hootenanny” that I’ve always wanted to hear.

Please Help!

Classic ISKCON Vinyl – Temple Radha Krishna

As promised a couple of days ago, I’ll be digitally rerecording all of my Classic ISKCON Vinyl. You can read all about that here. The first reselection is Temple Radha Krishna (not to be confused with the original Radha Krishna Temple that came out on Apple Records).

Temple Radha Krishna
Les Productions Parampara
RPI 101

Temple Radha Krishna

Temple Radha Krishna was released by Les Productions Parapmara. That label released at least two other records. Temple Radha Krishna was the first (#101). Vrindavana (#102) and Goddess of Fortune (#103 – basically a bootleg of a bootleg of Apple’s Radha Krishna Temple) followed.

My thought is that Temple Radha Krishna was purposely named such to confuse people into thinking that this was the George Harrison produced record. Basically, if people think this is that, we can move more copies.

The cover image was also used for the Brahma-samita book. The cover itself is pretty cheaply made. The rear cover is in French but features a picture of George Harrison (along with Malati and Shymasundar prabhus – who both appeared on the Apple Records album). Acyutananda Swami is also pictured.

Acyutananda Swami is featured on four cuts. Bhagavan dasa has three. Yogesvara dasa has one, as does Srila Prabhupada.

Here’s a rundown and review of the songs.

Face 1 Face 2


Face 1 (apparently they’re called “faces” not “sides” in France)
1. Gaurangera Dutipada 6:32 – The first song is by Srila Prabhupada. The quality is clearly different than the rest of the record, so more than likely they just threw this on, taking it from another recording. I’m not sure if this specific recording is also on one of the Vintage Series CDs, but I wasn’t familiar with it before hearing it here.

2. Gaya Gora Madhur Svare 5:10 – Acyutananda Swami gives us our second cut with a sitar-driven rendition. There are also kartals very haphazardly played. However, his voice is really great in this. The production pushes the vocals, while the instruments are fairly lost in the back.

3. Gopinatha 4:05 – Things are slowed down here, with Acyutananda Swami at the helm once again. This was clearly from the same session as Gaya Gora Madhur Svare, above.

4. Radha-Madhava 5:02 – Bhagavan dasa takes over for the last cut on side one. This one is a soft, yet rocking kirtana style rendition of this daily-sung song. It’s got a harmonium, a mrdanga and a few kartals. Quite a fun track. It’s one that really makes this album great.



Face 2
5. Japa (Meditation) 1:05 – By “Les bhaktas assembles.” The second side starts us off with about a minute of japa as chanted in the temple by devotees. No one voice is featured. I wish they would have done a whole album of this. That would be fun.

6. Kesava Kali Mala 5:21 – And Acyutananda Swami is back for what is my favorite song on this album. It’s upbeat and fun. Also from the same session as the first two Acyutananda Swami tracks. Have a listen. It’s fun.

7. Radhe 5:21 – It’s time to slow things down a bit with another one of my favorite songs. Acyutananda Swami is on vocals again (his last song on this album). It features a droning sitar, kartals (played pretty well) and a mrdanga. The temp picks up towards the end.

8. Bhaja Bakata 1:50 – Sung by Bhagavan dasa, this is a quick clip of Gaura-arati played on the harmonium from the same session as track four. For some reason it slides right into the next track:

9. Hare Krsna 3:20 – A kirtana led by Yogesvara dasa. I’m not sure why they did the slide, but I have both songs (tracks 8 and 9) on one file so that the transition from one song to the next could be preserved. This is a too short, but fun kirtana with a cute female voice in the background yelling “Hare Hare!” Yogesvara dasa’s voice is great. I wish there were kirtanas of his floating around.

10. Hare Krsna 2:22 – This is weird and almost trance-like. Bhagavan dasa’s voice is soft and slow, followed by a harmonium. The kartals and the mrdanga are playing a much faster beat, in double-time. There’s also there are a few conchs blowing in the back ground. A great way to end this great album.

Temple Radha Krishna

I’m really happy to be doing this. I hope it brings a smile to the devotees’ faces. I hope that someone out there remembers these albums. And if no one does, well maybe if you’re hearing them for the first time, you’ll play them again and again.

This album is available as high quality mp3s and as “lossless” FLAC files. For most of you, the MP3 at 320kbps will be more than sufficient.

Click here to download the entire album in one big zip file! (88 MB)

Download the FLAC files here.




Technical Information:
Media Used:
Vinyl LP from my personal collection.

Hardware Used:
Turntable: Audio Technica PL-120A
Cartridge: ATP-2XN (Stock)
TCC TC-750LC Audiophile Phono Preamp
Soundcard: Roland Edirol UA-1EX USB external soundcard

Software Used:
Audacity 1.3.7 on Linux Mint 7
-Digital recording from soundcard
-Manual removal of remaining clicks
-Editing and splitting of tracks

Converted Wav to 320kbps MP3 and FLAC using SoundConverter 1.4.1

Artwork Scanned from Original @ 300 dpi
Edited and Restored Using GIMP Image Editor 2.6.6

Redoing my entire Classic ISKCON Music collection

As you do things you care about, you get better at doing them. This certainly the case with how I digitally “preserved” my classic ISKCON vinyl and tapes. This practice involves recording the records or tapes with your computer and “ripping” them to a digital audio file (like WAV or MP3). Then, I had limited knowledge, resources, disk space and time. Some of that has changed.

The wheel of steel!I’m a bit more knowledgeable when it comes to preserving audio. Before I was kind of almost good enough. Honestly, it was the best I could do at the time, but it’s lacking in several areas. For one, I lost the original WAV files. I had only MP3s encoded at a 192kbps, which is almost alright, but is slowly becoming the low-end of almost alright.

My equipment has also been majorly upgraded. Before, I was using a plastic novelty turntable which was great for casual listening, but for anything more I would need to forge ahead. That’s what I did. Nowadays, I’ve got an Audio-Technica PL-120 (the poor man’s Technics SL-1200 series). The Audio-Technica PL-120 comes with a built in phono preamp, but something wasn’t right with it (has to do with messed up waveforms – don’t worry about it). I got myself a pretty decent TCC TC-750LC. It’s quite an improvement. And instead of my computer’s very iffy soundcard, I now use an Roland Edirol UA-1EX USB external soundcard.

Roland and TCC - not a bad comboIs there room for improvement? I’ll eventually pick up a Shure M97xE cartridge (needle, etc). But what I have now is much better than just good enough and that’s what I was shooting for.

On the software end, I used to use Cool Edit Pro – it’s a very good program that’s since been bought and replaced by Adobe (I haven’t used it, so can’t really comment on Adobe’s program). For this new project, I’ve decided to exclusively use the Linux operating system. Cool Edit (or whatever it’s called now) is expensive. Most things for Linux are free. I am using Audacity, a free audio software program that allows me to record, mix, edit and slightly repair audio files. It’s definitely more limited than Cool Edit Pro, but it does everything I need.

Another area where I’ve become more aware is how to handle, store, clean and play records. If they are cleaned, dusted and destaticed there will be very few pops and crackles. This is much more desirable than fixing it digitally. The better the source file, the better the end result.

Waveforms for the first side of the Temple Radha Krishna album as captured on my laptop.When I did this before, I saved them as very low quality MP3s. MP3 is the accepted format, so I’ll definitely offer them again. This time they’ll be in 320kbps, high quality MP3s (the highest quality). I’ll also be offering them as “lossless” FLAC files. Most folks won’t care and the MP3s will be perfect for almost everyone, but for those who like FLAC, that’s what you’ll get.

I’m also rescanning the album covers and labels. Before, I scanned at a low quality, chopping off part of the cover or took a shaky picture with a crappy camera. Now, I’ll be scanning the entire cover (which requires four different scans to get the whole thing), back and front (so, eight scans). This is also done in Linux. I’m using Xsane for scanning and GIMP (a photoshop knockoff) put the four pieces together seamlessly.

Then I take it to my bigger computer to edit the wav files.All the software, including the operating system, is free and the results are every bit as good as I could do in Windows or Mac. This offsets the cost of equipment and records, you know, sort of.

I’ve just started, but I’ll be posting albums as often as possible. As for the tapes, I need a decent tape deck, which don’t seem to exist anymore. We’ll see how that works out.

The first album will be Temple Radha Krishna on the French Hare Krishna label Production Parampara. It was their first of at least three releases. It features Srila Prabhupada, Acyutananda Swami, Bhagavan dasa and Yogesvara dasa. Temple Radha Krishna is one of my favorite records and it’s great to come back to it. The results are obvious and I’m very pleased with it.

Check out the difference for yourself. Here is Acyutananda Swami doing “Kesava Kali Mala.” First, the old version…

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And now, the newly reripped version…

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Scanning and editing the cover!Keep in mind that with the new versions, I didn’t touch the EQ. The sound, for better or for worse, is exactly like it was on the original vinyl LP. Who knows what I did to the old version. I probably ran it through some noise filter and some thing to take out pops and clicks, which took out parts of the kartalas too.

So get ready, every Classic ISKCON Record I own will be reripped to digital and posted here. I might post one every Ekadasi or something, but I’ll probably just post them as I do them. Why wait?

The first record will be Temple Radha Krishna, but if you want to suggest the next record that I do, feel free to suggest one. Here’s the list to choose from. Eventually the whole Classic ISKCON Music site will be incorporated into SitProperly.com. Give me some time.

Alan Ginsberg chants Hare Krishna

I’m not sure if this has ever been posted, but most of us have heard stories of Alan Ginsberg really liking Srila Prabhupada and chanting Hare Krishna. He was actually chanting Hare Krishna before he met Srila Prabhupada. He went to India and heard the maha-mantra and it stuck with him. When he met the devotees in 1966, he immediately took to Srila Prabhupada, though they didn’t always agree in everything.

Even so, Ginsberg would donate money and even the use of his harmonium to Srila Prabhupada.

Ginsberg even brought the maha-mantra to Robert Kennedy. When seeing Kennedy about other maters (relating to the Feds possibly planting drugs in Ginsberg’s apartment), he told Bobby:

“Oh, there’s something I forgot. I was going to sing you a little song.” He said, “Okay, I got a minute.” So I sang about eight verses of Hare Krsna mantra and he said, “What’s that?” And I said, “When you hear this, it’s supposed to bring immediate liberation.” So he said, “Well, the guy up the block needs it more than I do,” pointing up to the White House when Johnson was running the Vietnam war. That was Kennedy’s introduction to Hare Krsna.

In 1967, Ginsberg met Srila Prabhupada at the San Francisco airport and helped organize the Mantra Rock Festival.

When Ginsberg was in the hospital in 1968, Srila Prabhupada wrote him a letter hoping that he recovers and to (of course) keep chanting Hare Krishna.

They had long talks in Columbus, Ohio in 1969, which have been recorded and transcribed for posterity.

The devotees tried a couple of times to set up another such meeting, but it never came to be. Srila Prabhupada would usually speak fondly of Ginsberg and explain that though he isn’t really following, at least he is chanting Hare Krishna.

A few years ago, I came across a record recorded by The Fugs called Tenderness Junction. The Fugs were sort of the first punk band – not so much in sound as in attitude. But they were friends with Alan Ginsberg and often performed together.

The Fugs, in 1966, met Srila Prabhupada and liked the philosophy well enough – except for the “no illicit sex” parts.

In early 1968, The Fugs released Tenderness Junction on Reprise Records. On it was Alan Ginsberg singing “Hare Krishna.” Prabhupada was glad that Ginsberg was chanting, but thought his chant too complex for the new devotees. By today’s standards, Ginsberg’s Hare Krishna is a very simple melody.

Check it out.

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Hare Krsna Happening! The First Hare Krsna Record

While this certainly wasn’t the most popular record to come from the Classic ISKCON era, it was the first and was the reason for all of the other records.

Neither the devotees nor Srila Prabhupada sought out a record deal or seemed to give much thought to recording. But around Christmas time in 1966, a record producer, Alan Kallman, read an article in the East Village Other about the devotees.

Kallman isn’t someone who I can trace. He owned Ribbon Records in the late 50′s and early 60′s. They didn’t really have any hits. By the mid 60′s, according to a letter from Srila Prabhupada to a “Mr. Fulton,” Alan Kallman owned Pixi Records.

He decided to drop by 26 2nd Ave in New York City (the first Hare Krishna temple) to see for himself.

Back to Godhead Magazine did a great write up on the recording of this in a 1981 issue. It was later used in the Lila-mrta. Here are some clips of that.

Alan phoned Prabhupada to propose that he make a record of the chanting. But it was Brahmananda who answered the phone, and he gave Alan an appointment with the Swami that evening. So again Alan and his wife went down to the East Village, which to them was the neighborhood where things were happening. If you wanted to have some excitement, you went down to the East Village.

When they entered the Swami’s room, he was seated at his typewriter, working. As soon as Alan mentioned his idea about making a record, Prabhupäda was interested. “Yes,” he said, “we must record. If it will help us distribute the chanting of Hare Krsna, then it is our duty.” They scheduled the recording for two weeks later, in December, at the Adelphi Recording Studio near Times Square. Alan’s wife was impressed by how enthusiastically the Swami had gotten to the point of making the record: “He had so much energy and ambition in his plans.”

From Hare Krishna Explosion by Hayagriva das:

The night before the recording session, a guest appears at Matchless Gifts with a wooden drum resembling a mridanga—a two-headed Bengali clay drum used in Vaishnava kirtans and reportedly designed by Lord Chaitanya Himself. Swamiji spots it from the dais. Quickly the drum is in his lap, and he is playing it expertly. Everyone looks up, surprised. For us, the sounds seem to come from faraway Bengal, or, perhaps, from other planets, so strange are the rhythms and sweet the echoes.

“We must have this drum for tomorrow’s recording,” Swamiji says, and Brahmananda convinces the owner to lend us the drum for the recording session.

Brahmananda: Swamiji began to play, and his hands were just dancing on the drum. Everyone was stunned that Swamiji knew how to do this. All we had seen was the bongo drum, so I thought it was the proper Indian drum. But when this two-headed drum came out of nowhere and Swamiji started playing it like a master musician, it created an ecstasy a hundred times more than the bongo drum had. (From SPL)

It was a cold December night. The Swami, dressed in his usual saffron dhoti, a tweed overcoat, and a pair of gray shoes (which had long since replaced his original white, pointy rubber ones), got into Rupanuga’s VW van with about fifteen of his followers and their instruments and started for the recording studio.

They recorded at Adelphi Recording Studio in Times Square. Hayagriva’s book gives a short paragraph about the recording. Satsvarupa’s book gives us a bit more detail. There were about fifteen devotees with various instruments including a harmonium loaned to them by Allen Ginsberg.

Prabhupada sat on a mat in the center of the studio, while the engineers arranged the microphones and assigned each devotee a place to sit according to his particular instrument. They asked for only two pairs of karatalas and they approved of the pairs of rhythm sticks, but they wanted several devotees clapping their hands. Rupanuga’s usual instrument was a pair of brass Indian bells with the tongues removed, and when the engineer saw them, he came over and said, “Let me hear that.” Rupanuga played them, and they passed. Since Ravindra Svarupa would be playing the drone on the harmonium, he sat apart with his own microphone, and Kirtanananda also had a microphone for the tamboura. (From SPL)

Srila Prabhupada and the devotees seem to have performed live in the studio for this one. On subsequent records, they seem to have recorded in tracks. There’s a video of some devotees explaining to Srila Prabhupada (almost treating him like he’s a child – which never really sat well with me) that they can do multi-track recording. The idea was new to him – the only other time he recorded was live in the studio.

The first take didn’t go so well because Brahmananda was clapping too loudly. But on the second take, it all came together.

After a few rounds of the mantra, the devotees began to feel relaxed, as though they were back in the temple, and they were able to forget about making mistakes on the record. They just chanted, and the beat steadied into a slightly faster pace. The word hare would come sometimes with a little shout in it, but there were no emotional theatrics in the chorus, just the straight response to the Swami’s melody. Ten minutes went by. The chanting went faster, louder and faster-Swamiji doing more fancy things on the drum, until suddenly… everything stopped, with the droning note of the harmonium lingering.

Alan came out of the studio: “It was great, Swami. Great. Would you like to just go right ahead and read the address now? Or are you too tired?” With polite concern, pale, befreckled Alan Kallman peered through his thick glasses at the Swami. Swamiji appeared tired, but he replied, “No, I am not tired.” Then the devotees sat back in the studio to watch and listen as Prabhupada read his prepared statement. (From SPL)

After reading it, the producer tells Srila Prabhupada that they have about ten more minutes on side two to fill. He asks Srila Prabhupada if he is tired. Prabhupada says that he isn’t and they start to chant again. This time he sang what was titled on the album as “Chant to the Mercy of the Spiritual Master.” We know it as “The Samsara Prayers.”

After the song, which was done in one take, Srila Prabhupada said, “Now we are tired.” The night was over. However, as the studio engineer replayed the take, Srila Prabhupada stood up and started to dance to the song the devotees and he had just recorded.

“Now you have made your best record,” Swamiji told Mr. Kallman as he left the studio for the freezing Manhattan evening. Swamiji got into the front seat of the Volkswagen bus while “The Hare Krsna Chanters” climbed into the back with their instruments, and Rupanuga drove them back home, back to the Lower East Side. (From SPL)

I’m not sure when the record was formally released. I’m also not sure why it was released on Happening Records (maybe Alan owned them for a time?).

After its release, the record somehow found its way into the hands of George Harrison and John Lennon.

By the time the Hare Krsna movement first came to England in 1969, John and I had already gotten ahold of Prabhupada’s first album, Krsna Consciousness. We had played it a lot and liked it. That was the first time I’d ever heard the chanting of the maha-mantra. – George Harrison

It was because of this album that Harrison produced the Radha Krsna Temple album. And it was because of that album that all of the other records were made. So had it not been for Alan Kallman approaching Srila Prabhupada in 1966, things would have been very different.

Its release was obviously a huge benediction for the newly established Krishna consciousness movement. But it wasn’t until nearly ten years later (March of 1976 in New Dehli, India) that Srila Prabhupada saw any direct royalties from it.

An unexpected visitor turned up in the afternoon: Mr. Alan Kallman from New York. He produced Prabhupada’s first Hare Krsna record in 1966. He arrived with a lady friend, and at long last gave Prabhupada his royalties from the record’s sales. They amounted to about 170,000 rupees, to which he added a personal donation of $2,000. Although not a devotee, it was obvious that he has great admiration and respect for Srila Prabhupada.

And Srila Prabhupada, in turn, was very happy to see him, greeting him as an old friend. He had his guests sit while we fed them sumptuous prasadam. As they ate, Prabhupada chatted very amicably with them and would not let them go until they had eaten everything. He smiled brightly all the while, clearly delighting his guests. He is expert at entertaining and encouraging people to increase their devotional service to the Supreme Lord. (From Hari Sari’s Diary)

At that time (and maybe even now), Kallman still owned the rights to this album. I’m not sure why that mattered, the devotees have bootlegged the George Harrison produced album like crazy. But maybe at this time (1975ish), the devotees had not yet taken to that (though that’s doubtful).

It was because of Kallman owning the rights to this record that Golden Avatar Studios was founded and the devotees started to record themselves.

He [Krsna Kanti dasa, founder of Golden Avatar] also offered to record Srila Prabhupada when he visits Los Angeles this summer. He especially wants to make a recording of Prabhupada chanting the Hare Krsna mantra, since the only other record of him doing this is still owned by Alan Kallman. (from HS)

A few months later Kallman, now back in New York, visited Srila Prabhupada again and gave him a $3000 donation.

-
This record wasn’t the easiest to track town. I don’t know much about how many copies were made or how widely it was distributed, but here it is, in my hands.

Please download it and enjoy.
Haribol!

Download entire album here.

Merry Janmastami! Here's Srila Prabhupada!

It’s been awhile since I posted a classic ISKCON record. And though Janmastami is a busy time, I thought I’d post it today.

So if you have time, you can download it and play it while you and your family lovingly hang the Janmastami ornaments upon the gentle branches of the Janmastami tree. Let these songs be the Janmastami songs you sing as you bundle up to go Janmastami caroling throughout your neighborhood. And at the end of the day, long after you’ve opened the Janmastami presents, you and yours can burn the annual Janmastami log while the kids gather round the hearth to hear stories of the ghosts of Janmastami past, present and, of course, Janmastami yet to come.

However, I thankfully digress.

Way back in December I found one of the missing links in my collection of Classic ISKCON Records. It was the third release by Radha Krsna Productions, a label that released both Acyutananda Swami AND Hamsadutta Swami records. Maybe they were trying to keep the peace? Or maybe it was just a way to repackage previously released material.

Such was the case with their fourth release, Hare Krsna Festival, a full LP of Hamsadutta’s moaning. And such is sort of the case with their third release, Krsna Meditation. I say “sort of” because I’m mostly assuming it is.

See, I can’t find out what their second release was. No idea. However, their fifth release was a reissue of some of the material from this LP. They even used the same name and same album cover. Lazy, folks!

The fifth release (RKP #1005) took Side One, Disc One along with Side Two, Disc Two of the third release (Double LP, RKP #1003). Was Side Two, Disc One and Side One, Disc Two of the third release originally released as RKP #1002? No idea, but it would make some sense.

Anyway, enough mental speculation.

I love records. I love how huge the artwork is, compared to CDs. And what I love most of all about records are gatefold sleeves. And Radha Krsna Productions’s third release, Krsna Meditations, is a gatefold, double LP set! If my kali-yuga memory serves me well enough, it’s the only gatefold, double LP that was released by devotees.

Radha Krsna Temple (released by Apple Records) was a beautiful gatefold, but only a single LP. This one, well, this one is double. And my copy of it is in unplayed condition.

The center picture is of Srila Prabhupada in the studio with Hamsadutta, Haimavati and, I assume, Cakravarti or Purijit das brahmacari. It makes sense that it would have been taken during this recording session.

Thankfully, Srila Prabhupada sings on all of the tracks. And these are long, beautiful renditions of the tunes. It’s all music, without purport.

Here’s the track list:

Disc One – Side One
1) Prayers to the Six Goswamis

Disc One – Side Two
1) Gaura Pranam
2) Sri Krsna Caitanya Prabhu

Disc Two – Side One
1) Jaya Radhe Jaya Krsna

Disc Two – Side Two
1) Yasomati-nandana
2) Cintamani

And if you like, you can download it here! Happy Janmastami!

Refuse to Fall – Soulfire 7" (Krishnacore)

Here’s a band that doesn’t exactly spring to mind when someone says “Krishnacore.” Refused to Fall were a Houston, TX-based band. They got together in 1989 and lasted about six years.

Their Soulfire 7″ was Equal Vision Record’s second release (anyone remember what the first was?). It came out in 1991.

In ’93, they toured with Shelter and 108. Upon returning home, they broke up. A Houston label put out another 7″ (The Stalemate Sessions) of theirs in 1994, but the band was still broken up. However, in 1996, they reformed to play a Shelter show and record a third EP (this time on CD) called Grey.

There was no lasting reunion, however, the band broke up and went their separate ways.

You can read more than you’ve ever wanted to know about them here.

Refuse to Fall – Soulfire 7″
Side one

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1) Temporary Eye
2) When the Well Runs Dry

Side two
1) Soulfire
2) Salvation

Download it here!

You can also hear more on MySpace.

Idol Water demo (Krishnacore)

Idol Water is the last of the three Krishnacore demos that I have. They were a project headed by Mikey Prema in between the first and second (last) Prema CDs.

While I was visiting the Philly temple in ’94 or ’95, I took Mikey and a couple of other kids (presumably from Idol Water) back to wherever the lived. Along the way, they played their demo. I really dug it and asked them for a copy. At some point, I got one (I don’t remember how).

Other than it being a Prema spin-off, I don’t know much about Idol Water at all.

Musically, this demo is varied. The first song is a Shelter-esque rap song. There’s a definite Dag Nasty feel to “Peg Above the Rest.” And “Jasmine” is a fun song about deity worship (I think).

The last song is a fun and slightly messed up tribute to Nrsmha Prayers with a “RIP HIS GUTS OUT!” refrain.

The bit at the end of the demo is Bhakta Avatar’s kid, Visnu, telling you to chant Hare Krishna.

Overall, the quality is better than the other demos, but it’s not bad. I might still have the original tape somewhere. Someday I’ll rerecord this to digital.

Track listing:

1) Machine II
2) Chew Toy

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3) Fire
4) Peg Above the Rest

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5) Jasmine
6) Nrsimhadeva

Download the whole thing here.

108 unreleased demo (Krishnacore demos)

Weirdly enough, I have no idea how I came to own the unreleased 108 demo. Apparently, it was never released. But you know how devotees are, we’ll bootleg anything and everything. I think I got it around the same time that I got the Prema demo.

I remember telling Ekendra (from Shelter, now of Planet Cow) that I got the 108 demo. He told me that he played drums on it and that it was basically just him and Vraja. I believe Ekendra played bass as well. Vraja played guitar and did the vocals.

From an interview with Rasaraja (Rob Fish, 108′s vocalist after the demo was recorded):

After I had been living in the Philly temple for about three months Vraja Kishor prabhu had quit Inside Out and joined Shelter. The Shelter decided to move to the Philly temple. Me and Vraja became friends. Eventually he wanted to do something different then Shelter and he wrote some songs and made a demo. 108 actually played a few songs at a show with Ressurection (1993). The day after the show Vraja called and asked me to sing for 108. The band was Vraja, me, Zack Eller (Worlds Collide) and Ekendra dasa (the drummer of Shelter). We recorded Holyname a few months later.

The demo was in 1993 some time but it never came out. The songs were rerecorded as the Holyname record.

The demo is basically the 108 Holyname 12″. The song “Noonenomore” was held over for their second 12″, Songs of Separation.

The sound quality on this is exceptionally crappy. Sorry about that. I can’t imagine it was great to begin with, it was recorded in the basement of the Philly temple, I think.

Track listing:

1) Holyname > Grow > Gopinatha
2) Hopeless
3) Noonenomore

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Download the whole demo here.

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