If, after 20 years and about a million sales, you still haven't heard of sacred chant and vocal producer, vocalist, author and lecturer
Robert Gass, allow none other than spiritual guru
Deepak Chopra to make the recommendation: "The word enchantment suggests becoming one with God through chanting.
Robert Gass' superb music and chanting achieves this goal." For the uninitiated, the problem with most recordings of this nature is sameness in rhythm, vibe and tone from track to track. The great news on
Kirtana -- a thoroughly hypnotic and compelling project consisting of seven deeply devotional Sanskrit chants from the Hindu tradition -- is the variation. The graceful opening track calms the mind with a gentle sitar swirling behind a surprisingly soulful lead vocal by
Gass' daughter
Danya River followed by choral response. The swaying, almost folk-like acoustic guitar-driven "Govinda Hare" introduces the listener to
Gass' low vocal tone, which may take older listeners back to some of
Neil Diamond's early world music vibe. "Om Shanti" plays to what the secular world would dub "chill music," with a male whisper floating over "River"'s soaring words and a gently rhythmic percussion scheme. The seduction, blending pop melodicism, Eastern instruments and gentle tribal rhythms, continues from there. Like most albums of its kind,
Kirtana inspires an open mind and relaxation; but it's also compelling in ways few other similar projects are. ~ Jonathan Widran