This album was the last formal collaboration between the two masters before Harrison's death in 2001. Recorded in both Chennai, India, and at Harrison’s Friar Park estate in England, the project was born from a desire to bring the intense spirituality of traditional Sanskrit prayers to a universal audience. While Shankar was renowned for his complex classical ragas, Chants of India took a different approach, setting shorter Hindu mantras and scriptural texts into lush, meditative arrangements. Why Audiences Still Listen
A bhajan (devotional song) in Raga Desh. George Harrison’s slide guitar-like phrasing on acoustic guitar is captured with remarkable intimacy. The FLAC version avoids the smearing of high-frequency cymbal taps. Ravi Shankar - Chants Of India 1997 only1joe FLAC
The "only1joe" label is associated with high-quality, lossless audio rips, and the FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec) format ensures that the music is preserved in its original, uncompressed form. For those who value precise and detailed sound reproduction, the "only1joe FLAC" version of "Chants Of India" is the ideal way to experience this remarkable album. This album was the last formal collaboration between
As streaming services continue to rotate their masters (sometimes replacing the 1997 version with inferior re-recordings), the reverence for the grows. It represents a time when digital music was a craft, not a commodity. Why Audiences Still Listen A bhajan (devotional song)