O Krishna You Are The Greatest Musician Video Song Download

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Wei Spinks

unread,
Jan 17, 2024, 10:04:13 AM1/17/24
to misrodsbhavcar

"My Sweet Lord" is a song by English musician George Harrison, released in November 1970 on his triple album All Things Must Pass. It was also released as a single, Harrison's first as a solo artist, and topped charts worldwide; it was the biggest-selling single of 1971 in the UK. In America and Britain, the song was the first number-one single by an ex-Beatle. Harrison originally gave the song to his fellow Apple Records artist Billy Preston to record; this version, which Harrison co-produced, appeared on Preston's Encouraging Words album in September 1970.

o krishna you are the greatest musician video song download


Download Zip https://t.co/1sOC7cPLM1



The line-up of musicians on the song has been hard to ascertain due to the lack of available studio documentation and conflicting recollections over the ensuing decades.[51][56] The musicians were requested by Harrison and booked by former Beatles roadie Mal Evans, acting in a role that Beatles scholar Kenneth Womack likens to a stage manager for the project. According to Womack and his co-author Jason Kruppa, Evans' diaries from the period provide the first reliable record of the participants at the All Things Must Pass sessions, since Evans paid the musicians and had to justify this expenditure to Apple.[57]

Reviewing the single for Rolling Stone, Jon Landau called the track "sensational".[116] Billboard's reviewer described the record as "a powerhouse two-sided winner", saying that "My Sweet Lord" had the "potent feel and flavor of another 'Oh Happy Day'", with powerful lyrics and an "infectious rhythm".[117] Record World called it "a haunting inspirational hare krishna chant-song to a tune reminiscent of the Chiffons' 'He's So Fine.'"[118] Ben Gerson of Rolling Stone commented that the substituting of Harrison's "Hare Krishna" refrain for the trivial "Doo-lang, doo-lang, doo-lang"s of "He's So Fine" was "a sign of the times"[119] and recognised Harrison as "perhaps the premier studio musician among rock band guitarists".[92][nb 8] In his December 1970 album review for NME, Alan Smith bemoaned the apparent lack of a UK single release for "My Sweet Lord". Smith said the song "seems to owe something" to "He's So Fine",[120][121] and Gerson called it an "obvious re-write".[119]

Bright Tunes Music v. Harrisongs Music went to the United States district court on 23 February 1976, to hear evidence on the allegation of plagiarism.[16][133] Harrison attended the proceedings in New York, with a guitar, and each side called musical experts to support its argument.[128] Harrison's counsel contended that he had drawn inspiration from "Oh Happy Day" and that Mack's composition was also derived from that hymn. The judge presiding was Richard Owen, a classical musician and composer of operas in his spare time.[136]

Harrison performed "My Sweet Lord" at every one of his relatively few solo concerts,[211] starting with the two Concert for Bangladesh shows at New York's Madison Square Garden on 1 August 1971.[212] The recording released on the subsequent live album was taken from the evening show[213] and begins with Harrison's spoken "Hare Krishna" over his opening acoustic-guitar chords.[214] Among the 24 backing musicians was a "Soul Choir" featuring singers Claudia Linnear, Dolores Hall and Joe Greene,[215] but it was Harrison who sang the end-of-song Guru Stotram prayer in his role as lead vocalist, unlike on the studio recording (where it was sung by the backing chorus).[216] The slide guitar parts were played by Eric Clapton and Jesse Ed Davis.[217]

O krishna you are the
Greatest musician of this world
O krishna you are the
Greatest musician of this world
Bansuri se tune prem
Sandesha diya hain mohana
Bansuri se tune prem
Sandesha diya hain mohana

O krishna you are the
Greatest musician of this world
O krishna you are the
Greatest musician of this world
Bansuri se tune prem
Sandesha diya hain mohana
Bansuri se tune prem
Sandesha diya hain mohana.

Safe is a German hardcore band that inititally started as a studio project of Dharmavit Das, a native of Italy and Krishna devotee. The group recently released a 3-song EP called Stay Strong that has raised their profile throughout the hardcore scene. I recently chatted with Dharmavit about all-things Safe and the first thing I wanted to know was how tough it was to find the musicians to fill out the lineup once he decided he wanted to pursue it as proper band. "Well, like you say, in the beginning Safe was only a little side project of mine," the singer told me. "I asked my friend Marco if he wanted to be part of Safe because he is really a great musician. We changed frequently changed drummers for the first releases (Make a Move EP, plus the Not Alone and Ride a New Season records). When Ride a New Season was out, we decided to fix the lineup.

f448fe82f3
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages