Reviews4.5 stars out of 5 - "...An album that is simultaneously modest and bold...it has stood up well to the passing of time....a bracing air of creative liberation...", "The incredible 'My Sweet Lord' was obviously the most popular song off the album, but deeper, slower tracks like 'Behind That Locked Door' and 'I’d Have You Anytime' are just as sweet.", "...Brighter, remastered sonics....Harrison and Phil Spector's Wall of Krishna Sound is still majestically congested, and the songs are so strong that Harrison would never top them. Even the jams feel refreshing in their looseness..." - Rating: A-, Included in Mojo's "Best Reissues of 2001"., "..an intensely personal statement and a grandiose gesture, a triumph...an album of striking honesty and force..", "Throughout, he sounds like he’s having the time of his life crafting future classics like 'Isn’t It A Pity' and 'What Is Life' and throwing an in-studio party with his buddies Eric Clapton, Ringo Starr and Billy Preston.", 5 stars out of 5 - "...Rock and religion have rarely, if ever, been so happily conjoined....it remains the single most satisfying collection of any solo Beatle, maybe sounding even fresher for being sidelined so long...", "...This remains the best Beatles solo album....oozing both the goggle-eyed joy of creative emancipation and the sense of someone pushing himself to the limit...", "...His Best and Most Accomplished Work...", "Given his own studio, his own canvas, and his own space, Harrison did what no other solo Beatle did: He changed the terms of what an album could be."
Additional InformationA Triple-Lp Set That's Often Considered the Greatest of All Solo Beatle Albums.