Guru Guru - Dance Of The Flames -1974 2006- -flac- -

The album still retains deep roots in psychedelic rock, but its most significant feature is the prominent introduction of jazz-rock and funk elements, a style that would never leave the band's sound afterward. Dominated by jazz-rock, the album showcases Guru Guru at a creative peak, pushing beyond the boundaries of a single genre. This new direction is almost entirely due to Nejadepour's influence, who had been deeply impacted by the likes of John McLaughlin and Jimi Hendrix. His playing is so reminiscent of McLaughlin that some critics felt the band's sound on this album dangerously approached "clone-status," sounding like a stripped-down, keyboard-and-violin-less version of the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Despite this, the musicianship is perfect, and the trio—Nejadepour on guitar, Hans Hartmann on bass, and Mani Neumeier on drums—deliver strong jazz solos with a "power trio" force.

: Contributing solid, often complex work on electric and double bass. Guru Guru - Dance Of The Flames -1974 2006- -FLAC-

: Iconic drummer Mani Neumeier remained the visionary core, blending his signature humor—such as the duck vocals in "Dagobert Duck's 100th Birthday" —with polyrhythmic, world-music-influenced drumming. The album still retains deep roots in psychedelic

Detail the from the mid-70s.