Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
An acceptable double post!
Yes, but this is a new video. And still a great song. 100%
This is so trippy. What is the meaning of this song and video??
It seemed like they were searching for something. Then at the end they get in the car, didn't find anything, and the lady asks "What were they watching?" and the guy admitted he didn't know, he didn't think of that. Then the radio turns on and its that song playing. I wonder what they were searching for with that light probe thing, and why it was so important that he didn't notice what they were watching in the cinema.Is this a joking question or serious?
This song popularizes the Hare Krishna mantra, which is used to invoke the Hindu deities:
depending on the view. The mantra originates from Bengali Vishnuism, also called Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition, which was started in the 16th century by a saint named Chaitanya. An elderly gentle(?)man named Prabhupada, a former distributor of pharmaceutical products who had become a monk, brought the teaching to America in the 1960s and founded an organization called the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON), which (rightly) carries the stigma of being a cult, on the one hand because they were or are engaged in dubious practices, and on the other hand because, as a relatively popular Hindu religion, it wonderfully fits into the negative scheme of pagan religions (worshipping a "false" god and committing "idolatry" by worshipping statues). Hare Krishna is therefore ashamed of the "Hindu stigma" and calls its teachings not Hinduism, but "Vedic religion", although strictly speaking, the Vedas are not read, and many ISKCON followers probably do not even know what the Vedas actually are. Hare Krishnas also consider themselves monotheist.
- Hari (Vishnu), Krishna and Rama /
- or Krishna who gives joy (rama) to his girlfriend Radha (Hara),
The Hare Krishna mantra often appeared in popular rock and pop songs during the counterculture period of the 1960s/1970s, e.g. in the musical "Hair", but George Harrison's version was probably the most successful.
The verse at the end translates as: The Guru is the Creator (Brahma), the Guru is the Preserver (Vishnu), Gurudeva is the Destroyer (Shiva or Maheshwara) the Guru is the absolute Lord himself, Salutations to that Sri Guru.
In the 1990s Boy George released another song with the Hare Krishna mantra, but ISKCON still kicked him out for being gay.
As for the video for "My Sweet Lord," I have no idea. "All things must pass" is the title of an album by George Harrison, which also contains "My sweet Lord". For the rest, I can only interpret the cinema, which I would consider as a metaphor for the deceptive illusion (Maya) or in the sense of the cave equation. But maybe the video has no other message than just wanting to be "trippy".
It seemed like they were searching for something. Then at the end they get in the car, didn't find anything, and the lady asks "What were they watching?" and the guy admitted he didn't know, he didn't think of that. Then the radio turns on and its that song playing. I wonder what they were searching for with that light probe thing, and why it was so important that he didn't notice what they were watching in the cinema.
Hah! The next thing you know you will be claiming that Vanilla Ice copied from Queen. It is totally different as this video shows: