Via his disciples, Prabhupada had recommended that the Beatles record the Hare Krishna mantra, in order to spread the message of Krishna Consciousness to the group's wide fan base. Instead, Harrison chose to produce a version by the London-based ISKCON devotees and issue it as a single on Apple Records. As a song, "Hare Krishna Mantra" consists of the sixteen-word
Sanskrit Maha Mantra sung over both verse and chorus:
Recording The recording for "Hare Krishna Mantra" took place at EMI Studios in July 1969, shortly before a session for the Beatles'
Abbey Road album. Harrison worked through a musical arrangement for the piece on guitar, with Mukunda playing piano. For the recording, Harrison decided on joint vocalists over the verses,
Yamuna and Shyamsundar, with the other devotees joining in on the choruses. The engineer on the recording was
Ken Scott. Harrison played harmonium during the initial taping, which required three takes to perfect. He then added
Leslie-effected electric guitar at the start of the track, and also
overdubbed a bass guitar part. after the track had built to what author Simon Leng describes as a "dervishlike climax". In her 2009 autobiography, O'Dell writes of the experience of feeling "physically and spiritually changed" after singing the mantra, adding: "Chanting the words over and over again was almost hypnotic … there was a point of freedom where there was no effort at all, no criticism or judgment, just the sound generated from deep inside, like a flame that warmed us from the inside out." For the
B-side, Harrison recorded the devotees singing "Prayer to the Spiritual Masters". According to Prabhupada biographer
Satsvarupa dasa Goswami, the lyrics offer praise to "Śrīla Prabhupāda, Lord Caitanya and His associates, and the
six Gosvāmīs" which Shyamsundar regularly played during kirtan.
Release Apple Records issued the single, which was credited to "Radha Krishna Temple (London)", on 22 August 1969 in the United States (as Apple 1810) and on 29 August in the United Kingdom (as Apple 15). On 28 August, Harrison joined the devotees at Apple's press launch, held in the gardens of a large property in
Sydenham, south London. Straight after the launch, Harrison drove down to the
Isle of Wight to rejoin
Bob Dylan, Mukunda later identified this exposure, together with the song's airing during halftime at a
Manchester United football game, as being indicative of how the ancient Maha Mantra "penetrated British society" via the Harrison-produced recording.
Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and his disciple
Nityananda Prabhu engaged in public chanting in
Bengal In the UK, the single's picture sleeve featured a photograph of the devotees taken by
Ethan Russell. Harrison biographer
Alan Clayson writes of the public's amusement at the appearance of the Temple devotees, dressed in orange robes and with shaved heads; speaking in 2011, Mukunda recalled hearing "Hare Krishna Mantra" played on a London radio station, followed by the announcer's description: "That was a song by a group of bald-headed Americans!" Clayson continues: "but thanks to George the irrepressible 'Hare Krishna Mantra' had encroached on public consciousness to a degree that Prabhupada could never have imagined in 1966." In his review of the single for the
NME, Derek Johnson said that Harrison had created "an Eastern Ono band", referring to Lennon's side project with
Yoko Ono, the
Plastic Ono Band. Johnson described the sound as "Indian gospel" and said that the track's "insistent repetition" gave it "the same insidious hypnotism as '
Give Peace A Chance'". The single was an unexpected commercial success, and number 15 in
West Germany. The single failed to chart in America, however. The Radha Krishna Temple appeared on
BBC-TV's
Top of the Pops to promote the song They also made many concert and festival appearances in response to the song's popularity. Author Peter Lavezzoli has described the success of "Hare Krishna Mantra" as "an astonishing feat" and an indication of the extent of the Beatles' cultural influence. In the
Gaudiya Vaishnava faith, the international acceptance of the mantra fulfilled a prediction by Lord Chaitanya, ==Album recording==