There are songs that arrive like finished objects—tight, polished, perfectly framed. And then there are songs that feel like they wandered in from somewhere older than the music industry itself. “The Perfumed Garden,” the latest release from Ananda Xenia Shakti and Love Power the Band, belongs to the second category. It doesn’t present itself so much as it appears, like a scent you suddenly notice in the air.
The track moves slowly, almost suspiciously so, as if it’s testing the listener’s patience. There’s repetition—phrases circling back again and again: I will walk to you. It’s everywhere. At first it feels simple, maybe even naïve. But that simplicity begins to bend under the weight of its own insistence. The words don’t evolve; they accumulate. By the time the song reaches its final stretch, the repetition doesn’t feel like structure anymore. It feels like ritual.
Shakti’s voice sits at the center of it all, not as a technical display but as a kind of presence. It doesn’t soar or dominate. It lingers. There’s a grain to it—a human friction—that keeps the song from drifting into spiritual wallpaper. It recalls the strange tension you find in older folk traditions, where devotion is less about perfection than persistence.
The music behind her holds back just enough to let the atmosphere breathe. Keys drift in and out like distant lights. The rhythm never quite asserts itself as a beat so much as a pulse, something you might notice in your body before your ears. It’s the kind of arrangement that makes you aware of space—between sounds, between thoughts.
What makes “The Perfumed Garden” intriguing is the way it carries traces of two seemingly incompatible histories. Shakti’s past in punk rock echoes here, not in distortion or aggression but in a certain refusal. The refusal to tidy things up. The refusal to deliver a neat climax. Punk, at its core, was always about stripping away false authority. In that sense, this song continues the argument—but now the argument is spiritual.
There are moments when the track feels less like a performance than a gathering—something that might have existed long before recording technology and could just as easily exist after it. That quality is rare in contemporary music, where even the most intimate moments are often designed to scale.
By the end of “The Perfumed Garden,” you realize the song hasn’t really moved forward in the traditional sense. Instead, it has circled back to where it began, only now the place feels different. Or maybe you do.
And that, perhaps, is the quiet trick the song plays: it convinces you that the garden it keeps naming—the one that is “everywhere”—might not be metaphor after all. It might simply be the space you’re standing in, listening.
–Mark Greyson








