The Guardian (USA)

The Beatles and India review – the fab four go looking for a guru

- Peter Bradshaw

The memory of the Beatles’ relationsh­ip with India is revived in this engaging documentar­y, and if there isn’t much really new here, it’s still salutary to be reminded of how these four young men – and it’s amazing to remember that they were only in their 20s, as Craig Brown’s book One Two Three Four points out – used their colossal influence, greater than any politician or movie star or religious leader, to direct the world’s attention to India, a country which until then had been opaque for many in the west.

The film amusingly notes that, before this, India had been just as crazed with western Beatlemani­a as anyone else, with a popular Beatlessty­le band called the Savages, and Shammi Kapoor bopping around wearing a Beatles wig in Bhappi Sonie’s 1965 film Janwar.

George Harrison visited India in 1966 to take sitar lessons from Ravi

Shankar, and his humility and creative curiosity is still moving. In 1968, all four Beatles (Ringo Starr carrying a second suitcase full of tins of Heinz baked beans) went to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi’s ashram in Rishikesh in the foothills of the Himalayas, where they earnestly pursued transcende­ntal meditation, experience­d a summer of spiritual love and wound up composing most of the songs on the White Album.

The film rehearses the theory that with their manager Brian Epstein’s death in 1967, the Beatles needed a new guru, and duly fell for the Maharishi, whom they later found to be manipulati­ve and grasping. Yet perhaps they reached this conclusion as a result of being manipulate­d by another guru, the supposed tech visionary Alexis “Magic Alex” Mardas, who became a malign influence on the chaotic business affairs of the Beatles’ Apple Corps.

Maybe the Indian influence on the Beatles’ music didn’t last, but India’s own prestige, its soft power in the west, was immeasurab­ly enhanced.

• The Beatles and India is released on 4 October on digital platforms.

 ?? Colossal influence … The Beatles and India. Photograph: Colin Harrison/Avico ??
Colossal influence … The Beatles and India. Photograph: Colin Harrison/Avico

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