A song so rare fans thought it was myth—Paul McCartney’s “India” resurfaces like a ghost from the sitar-soaked past, rumored to be written after a trance-like encounter with a “being of light” during his silent retreat in Rishikesh; drenched in mysticism, whispered lyrics, and dreamlike chords, the track sounds less like music and more like a spiritual transmission from the astral plane—one fan even claimed, “I played it backwards and heard John say ‘keep going’”; real or not, YouTube’s melting, and the internet agrees: This isn’t a song—it’s a secret Beatles séance.

**The Beatles’ Hidden Spirit: Paul McCartney’s Lost Track “India” Resurfaces and Sends the Internet Spiraling**

 

A myth. A whisper. A sitar-drenched secret thought to be lost forever. But now, like a ghost in the groove, Paul McCartney’s elusive track *“India”* has resurfaced—sending Beatles fans and music historians into a frenzy.

 

Long rumored to have been written during the band’s 1968 spiritual retreat in Rishikesh, *“India”* was said to be inspired by a trance-like encounter McCartney once described as a “being of light.” For decades, it was the stuff of Beatles folklore—a song passed between collectors in hushed tones, referenced in obscure interviews, but never confirmed. Until now.

 

The track, suddenly appearing online and spreading like wildfire across YouTube and Reddit, sounds like nothing else in the Beatles canon. Draped in sitar, ambient drones, and whispered vocals, it drifts more than it drives—more meditation than melody. It doesn’t sound recorded so much as *received*.

 

One fan claimed, “It’s not a song—it’s a transmission,” while another swore, “I played it backwards and heard John say, ‘Keep going.’” Whether fact or fan-fueled fantasy, the collective response has been electric. YouTube is melting. Comments are flooding in by the second. The words “seance,” “miracle,” and “portal” appear more than once.

 

The lyrics are barely audible, sung like a lullaby across dimensions. McCartney, when asked years ago about the track, once called it “too personal, too strange to release.” But here it is, decades later—haunting, beautiful, and drenched in the mysticism of a moment lost in time.

 

Real or reconstructed, *“India”* has captured imaginations worldwide. This isn’t just a rediscovered track. It feels like a séance. A secret transmission from a time when four young men changed music—and maybe touched something far beyond it.

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