A devotional journey through sitar and raga, Vrindavan's temple bells, and the Ganga at Benares — the India one Beatle loved so deeply he asked for it to be his final resting place.
In 1966, George Harrison came to India to study the sitar with Ravi Shankar — and unlike anyone else who came in the sixties, he never really left. Vrindavan's chant, the raga's discipline, the Ganga's dawn light stayed with him for thirty-five years, until the river received him at the end. The George Harrison Way is inspired by that lifelong devotion.
A private travel narrative shaped by the musician who made Indian devotion part of Western music forever.
Temple courtyards, kirtan at dusk, sacred parikrama paths, and the town where devotion is a way of breathing.
Dawn boats on the Ganga, unhurried temple mornings, and evenings given to raga and aarti fire.
Historic references appear for editorial storytelling only. No album covers, logos, or official artwork are reproduced, and no endorsement by the Harrison estate is implied.
Premium, discreet, and cinematic, with local guidance around temple access, river timing, music, and reflection.
A devotional route built around Vrindavan's temples, Benares' river light, the sitar's living tradition, and the quiet discipline of Indian sound.
Walk the town Harrison loved above all others — temple bells, kirtan, sacred courtyards, and the devotion that shaped his music and his life.
Explore Walk
A private boat on the Ganga at first light — the river he sang to, and the river that finally carried him.
Find Stillness
A private raga session in the tradition of Ravi Shankar — the discipline, the drone, and the listening that changed Western music.
Begin Practice
Fire, bell, and chant on the great ghats at dusk — the ceremony that moved him for thirty-five years.
Hear The Evening
Move through sacred lanes, riverside steps, old courtyards, and the unhurried India of pilgrims and song.
Walk The Path
Kirtan, journaling, gardens within temples — designed for travellers who understand why he kept coming back.
Reflect PrivatelyThis is not generic India sightseeing. The stay language is quiet, private, and devotion-led: river-facing mornings, music rooms, temple-town courtyards, and restorative interiors.
Your base is designed around stillness, early river light, easy access to the ghats and temples, and a premium devotional rhythm rather than rushed sightseeing.
Every moment is shaped as a story: arrival, Vrindavan chant, the sitar room, Benares dawn, aarti fire, and a devotional farewell.
01
A private arrival into the capital, with an evening of Indian classical music to open the journey.
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02
Temple courtyards, kirtan at dusk, and the town whose devotion Harrison carried for life.
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03
A private session inside the living tradition of Ravi Shankar — instrument, discipline, listening.
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04
First light on the Ganga from a private boat, the ghats waking in bell and smoke.
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05
Fire and chant at Dashashwamedh — the ceremony of the river, witnessed from the water.
Plan This Moment →Seven devotional chapters from arrival to farewell, composed around Delhi, Vrindavan, and Benares.
A soft landing into the capital with the journey framed around devotion, not sightseeing.
Temple bells, kirtan, and a private orientation into the devotional heart of Braj.
A private raga session in the Shankar tradition — the music that rewired Western sound.
First light on the river, the ghats in bell and woodsmoke, silence between the oars.
Fire, bell, and chant on the great ghats, witnessed from a private boat.
Old Benares on foot — brocade ateliers, hidden shrines, and chai in the lanes.
A closing morning of kirtan and reflection before the journey releases you.
Every image stays within the George Harrison Way story: temple courtyards, Ganga light, aarti fire, sitar rooms, and devotional calm.
Temple courtyards, kirtan, and old Vrindavan devotion.
Premium, private, cinematic, and deeply specific to his India: not generic tourism, but a devotional route through Vrindavan, the raga, and the Ganga.
Begin The JourneyQuiet spaces shaped for chant, pause, and inner attention.
Sacred river mornings framed by temple bells and gentle light.
Shikharas, courtyards, and the architecture of devotion.
Raga, drone, and devotional chant as the heart of the story.
A guided narrative rooted in a thirty-five-year devotion, begun in 1966.
Slow movement through temple lanes, ghats, and old corners.
Warm overlays, aged textures, and a cinematic devotional India mood.
Chant, listening, silence, and personal devotional reset.
Three George Harrison Way experiences, each composed around Vrindavan, the raga, and the Ganga at Benares.
A short devotional introduction — temple bells, kirtan at dusk, and the holy town's quiet lanes.
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A deeper journey through the sitar room, the dawn boat, and the great aarti at Benares.
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The complete seven-day arc — Delhi, Vrindavan, Benares — composed as a devotion, not a tour.
Request →"Rated 5.0 across 620+ TripAdvisor reviews — two decades of guests carried across India's roads."
"IATO member and recognised by the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India."
"An owned ground fleet and a driver corps trained over two decades — the quiet machinery behind every journey."
Access is tailored for select private clients seeking devotional India, sacred music, and the river.
Step into Vrindavan chant, sacred river light,
raga and aarti fire — a journey shaped by lifelong devotion.
Strictly confidential · Devotion-led curation · An independent journey — not affiliated with or endorsed by the Harrison estate