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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Van's Most Spiritual Point
Van Morrison always wrote music about the spiritual, but the spiritual is always changing. Starting out rather earthly (Moon Dance), to off center (Beautiful Vision), to right down center (No Guru...), to over done (Enlightenment)...this CD will give years of enjoyment with the philosophy of "Just you & me, with the Father...in the garden" meaning: Love will...
Published on April 8, 2003 by John D. Dooley

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Doesn't stick as well as some others
I'm a big Van fan. I'm slowly building my collection to include all of his discs. At about 1/3 of the way I find this to be a beautiful, soulful cd with fewer standouts. It's a ...nice, smooth recording and a bit generic. It does include some real gems but overall it's not as magical as he can be. Tracks to listen to: "Ivory Tower,""One Irish Rover," "Got To Go Back,"...
Published on January 5, 2009 by Douglas A. Smith


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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Van's Most Spiritual Point, April 8, 2003
By 
John D. Dooley "PhiloX" (Southern California United States) - See all my reviews
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Van Morrison always wrote music about the spiritual, but the spiritual is always changing. Starting out rather earthly (Moon Dance), to off center (Beautiful Vision), to right down center (No Guru...), to over done (Enlightenment)...this CD will give years of enjoyment with the philosophy of "Just you & me, with the Father...in the garden" meaning: Love will give you the direct experience of the divine without a guru, method, or teacher. Less R&B during this period, more Celtic Folk-Rock, with a very clean & well performing back up band. Some songs deal with either a journey or someone special is coming (Foreign Window & Town Called Paradise), is this about the 2nd coming of Christ, or that we all shall become like Christ or Buddha? Are there hints of reincarnation or renewing? Most of the songs give 2 to 3 different meanings depending on your spirituality or understanding fitting everything from Buddhism to Christianity. Also some issues about being Irish, (One Irish Rover) to being oneself (Ivory Tower). This has to be my favorite Van Morrison CD.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This one has become one of my desert island CD's, October 28, 2005
It has been almost 20 years since I bought my first copy of the great, great masterpiece, "No Guru, No Method, No Teacher".

As time has gone by I have gone through the obvious changes that 20 years brings us; Travel, school,work, marriage, loss, pending middle age, not excluded et al.

Well, upon it's release, Van Morrison had been reaching for this body of work for a few years before. Starting with 1980's "Common One". Perhaps even, Veedon Fleece from 1974. bringing him through Jazz, Pop and lyrical indulgences that though hitting some fevered and brilliant moments were not fully realized until this album. He had struggled with his 1970's label, "Warner Bros and this was his second studio effort for Mercury Records. The change brought a revelation of sorts. A freedom.

From the opening, "Got to Go Back". The Van Morrison orchestral and jazz/soul pallette is being stretched and like the mist of the Irish sea, these songs flowed from the brush of Van's mind, pen, spirituality and his brilliant backing band. The acoustic guitars are in perfect balance with the electric guitars which are never intrusive. The sweeping string arrangements and outstanding piano composition/improvisation based on "feel" are nothing short of elevating. The whole band falls into a pocket that makes every track on this album a masterpiece in it's own individual standing and subsequently as a complete body of work.

Finally, Van's voice had changed by 1985 and matured to a rich, soulful, man's voice. Deep and poignant. His control and nuances of his always evident soul are placed in an almost prayer-like reading throughout. It is a wonder of an album and one which made me feel that in the mid-80's there was music being made that was the purest in the air. While certainly not the airwaves. "Ivory Tower" reached a few stations but, to not alot of attention. It didn't matter. It never has since.

This has been one of my desert island discs.

One of my top 5 album favorites of all time for the better part of two decades. I have been through one vinyl, and 2 CD editions and I have consistently introduced the CD to many friends as a gift. I'm sure it will continue in that capacity. This CD and the songs it carries are only one highpoint in Van's remarkable career. But, a gift it surely is. A gift he absolutely has and gave to us on this one.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Capturing Ecstasy--Beauty and the Beat, January 12, 2000
Van never lets us forget that he's the consumate musician and arranger. When he wants to rock, he rocks like no one else, and when he wants to portray a mystical experience in music, he paints with sound like a master. During the eighties he was in recovery and rediscovered magic in the moments of real life. Some of the songs on this disk, as well as on Avalon Sunset, my favorite, are attempts to capture in music those golden moments that are beyond words. We are fortunate when a great musician and poet like Van Morrison struggles to satisfy his own stringent demands, because the results come to us as gifts from the cosmos. Van rages, Van questions, Van is grateful, Van is blessed, and we are given all of it, to rock to, to wonder with, to be awed by. Irish Rover is lyrical, Foreign Window is cryptic, In the Garden is a breathless tribute to the moments when we contact "It," as he's been known to call a reality beyond the everyday. As the ultimate experience for some Deadheads would have been to trip with Jerry, some of us would choose to go for a walk with Van. His music is a reminder, though, that the good stuff is out there to be experienced by all of us, especially when we're alone or with those we love.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Grace, Majesty, Healing and Consolation, January 16, 2005
By 
Michael K. Kivinen (Wyoming, MI United States) - See all my reviews
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I dearly love Van Morrison's music, including all the obvious choices, such as "Moondance" and more recent titles such as "Down The Road." If pressed to select one album as a favorite, however, it would be 1986's "No Guru No Method No Teacher." Between 1979 and 1991 Morrison's lyrics explored more explicitly the spirituality hinted at in earlier works. On this album he takes the listener more deeply and effectively "into the mystic" than on any previous release. Allusions to mystical and Romantic poets, Theosophy, Celtic mysticism and Esoteric Christianity abound. I wonder if any other rock musician has name-checked Ray Charles, Lord Byron and the "Masters" of theosophical lore on the same album? An additional recurring theme is the paradox of innocence regained: in "breaking through to a new level of consciousness" (a line from "Thanks for the Information") one has also "got to go back" (the album's first track) to a more childlike sense of innocence, integration, wholeness and wonder. Regarding the music itself, his trademark "Caledonia Soul," reflecting, as always his converging influences of African-American soul, blues and jazz as well as Celtic folk music, remains readily evident, but with a more dreamy, meditative feel. More lush, less punchy than more familiar hits, it hearkens back to "Astral Weeks" and "Veedon Fleece" while also evincing his then-prominent concern with music as an agent of healing. I would agree with rock writer Brian Hinton who summed up the instrumental introduction to the track "Foreign Windows" by saying "there is a grace and majesty here which I have experienced from little else in rock music," and who called the album's overall effect "deeply consoling, healing even."
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful meditation, May 27, 2000
By A Customer
Many take issue with Van Morrison's mid-80's persona, foresaking edgier R&B for softer, more ethereal stylings. I find this a beautiful, tender and intimate album (despite what some might say about Van's sometimes arcane lyrics). This is an excellent starting place for someone whose only experience of Van is his early (or recent), bluesier work.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better Than Excedrin Migraine, June 30, 2003
By 
Ken Carroll "Ken Carroll" (Eastman, GA United States) - See all my reviews
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This, along with Poetic Champions Compose, paints a picture of such peaceful, spirtual warmth that it can cure a stress headache faster than anything one can buy over the counter. This is from a singer/songwriter that knows exactly where he is going with this album and takes us along with him for the beautiful, joyous ride. Van's spirtuality shines through on this album like the noonday sun breaking completely free of clouds, but is as gently persuasive as an early evening breeze. Van vividly paints scene after scene with his writing, his voice and tremendous musical arrangements. Listen to this while gazing up at the night sky. One of the 100 Greatest Albums on the Ken Carroll Scale.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Oh, the warm feeling...." Indeed!, October 5, 1999
What a delightfully warm and rhythmic parade of sound this album is! I'd nearly forgotten about it when I'd lost and failed to replace my cassette tape copy at least ten years ago.....whatever was I thinking? There are no radio hits on this album, with the very minor exception of Ivory Tower, which made the top 40 lists for perhaps ten minutes. This is a compliment, of course. What one finds here is quintessential soul-pilot blues-boy Van at his waltz time BEST. You'll love these richly layered simple songs of the spirit that ripple along like the clear mountain streams one imagines in the Ireland of our dreams, along about October of a year long, long ago. Revell in wonderful piano riffs, and a subtlety of voice that just mesmerizes. BUY IT! LOVE IT!
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Introspective Musings, March 15, 2004
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This is one of those Van Morrison CDs I've had for a long time, but never took the time to really know until recently. When I finally took it off the shelf to give it some time in the CD player, I found that I like it a lot more than when I first heard it.
Those who are long time Van Morrison fans are well acquainted with his periodic swings into the mystic realm from his rock and r&b roots. No Guru, No Method, No Teacher was issued in the midst of his longest flirtation with and exploration of things spiritual. Though I think Poetic Champions Compose is the finest recorded expression of his spiritual nature, No Guru is not to be overlooked.
Maybe one reason I was not ecstatic when I first listened to it is the rather even though above average quality of the music. There are only a two songs that stand above the others. One is "In The Garden" which presents a very religious and elevated view of love between a man and a woman. The other is Thanks For the Information, a slow and soulful rocker in Van's best tradition.
Hard core Van Morrison fans already own this CD. If you are fairly new to his music and prefer his slow-paced introspective Celtic musings to his more well-known swinging soul and rocking blues tunes, then this is a great album for you. I recommend it!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Statement from the Heart and an Absolute Masterpiece., April 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: No Guru No Method No Teacher (Audio CD)
This is one of Van Morrison's best album's of any phase of his career, period. In the Garden, Tir Na Nog, Foreign Window, and Thanks for the Information are classics of lyric writing with horn arrangements to make you cry. I was lucky enough to see Van Morrison perform the tracks from this album live in Portland, Oregon back in 1986, and he and his band were phenomenal. I wish his later efforts were as brilliant. This is a "must have" disc for any serious follower of Van the Man.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Six songs for the ages, January 31, 2006
By 
Steven Lyle (Sacramento, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
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The first six songs on this disc stack up against any music I've heard in my 35 years as a collector, and the last four are pretty darn good, too. This record and the one that followed, Poetic Champions Compose, show an artist continuing to make great music long after exiting the pop music spotlight. Van Morrison has had an extraordinary career--remarkably, largely under the radar--and these songs are a beacon to his fertile middle period. Essential.
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No Guru No Method No Teacher
No Guru No Method No Teacher by Van Morrison (Audio CD - 1994)
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