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Morrison's 1986 release, No Guru, No Method, No Teacher, was said to contain a " genuine holiness ... and musical freshness that needs to be set in context to understand.
" Critical response was favourable with a Sounds reviewer calling the album " his most intriguingly involved since Astral Weeks " and " Morrison at his most mystical, magical best.
" It contains the song, " In the Garden " that, according to Morrison, had a " definite meditation process which is a ' form ' of transcendental meditation as its basis.
It's not TM ".
He entitled the album as a rebuttal to media attempts to place him in various creeds.
In an interview in the Observer he told Anthony Denselow:

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