The lineup was reduced to a trio: Mani Neumeier (drums), Houschang Nejadepour (guitar), and Hans Hartmann (bass). This reduction allowed for more intricate interplay.
Dance of the Flames was ignored in 1974. Too weird for funk, too silly for prog, too structured for the avant-garde. But decades later, its influence is undeniable. You can hear its DNA in 90s bands like The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion (blues-punk-pulp) and in contemporary acts like Osees (the manic percussion, the wild slide guitar).
: The album features sudden shifts from quiet, delicate acoustic guitar plucking to explosive, full-band crescendos. FLAC preserves the full depth of these volume shifts without digital clipping.
The 2006 edition from Revisited Records (REV 043) is the definitive digital version often found in high-fidelity FLAC formats: Guru Guru - Dance Of The Flames -1974 2006- -FLAC-
Neumeier’s drum kit is loaded with auxiliary percussion, woodblocks, and specialized cymbals. In a FLAC file, these micro-details are perfectly audible, creating a rich, multi-layered soundstage.
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.
Prior to 1974, Guru Guru was famous for their chaotic, heavy, and politically charged psychedelic rock. Albums like UFO (1970) and Hinten (1971) were masterclasses in raw power, defined by Ax Genrich’s distorted, free-form guitar freakouts and Neumeier’s manic drumming. However, by the mid-1970s, the musical landscape was shifting. The incendiary fusion of Miles Davis, Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Return to Forever was capturing the imaginations of European musicians. The lineup was reduced to a trio: Mani
Guru Guru (Iconic German Krautrock band known for psychedelic, experimental, and improvisational rock).
To fully appreciate the complexity of 70s jazz-rock-fusion, lossless audio is essential. The FLAC format ensures that the high-frequency cymbal work and deep bass runs are preserved exactly as they were recorded in the studio. 4. Legacy and Lasting Impact
A surprisingly refreshing Latin jazz-rock blend, displaying the band's versatility. Too weird for funk, too silly for prog,
The album has often been compared to the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Critics have noted that with Nejadepour on guitar, the band often sounds like a stripped-down, high-octane version of John McLaughlin’s legendary fusion group. The guitar work is dazzling, moving from light-speed electric riffing to emotive, dynamic soloing. Drummer Mani Neumeier provides a frantic and complex rhythmic foundation, incorporating African and Indian polyrhythms. This is underpinned by Hans Hartmann’s wild and solid bass runs, which at times bear the powerful, driving quality reminiscent of John Wetton from the 1973-74 incarnation of King Crimson.
The availability of the 2006 remaster in pristine FLAC quality ensures that this pivotal moment in progressive music history is preserved exactly as the musicians intended, ready to be discovered by new generations of audiophiles. If you want to dive deeper into this era of music, Provide a of Guru Guru's early years.
(the title track) is a 10-minute epic. It begins with acoustic guitar before exploding into a polyrhythmic frenzy. Listen in FLAC: you can hear the separate hi-hat patterns, the resonance of Schaeffer’s saxophone reed, and the stereo spread of Neumeier’s tom-toms. It is a percussive masterpiece that predates both world music fusion and post-rock dynamics.
: The title track is a masterclass in jazz-fusion. Neumeier’s drumming is frantic yet controlled, locked in a fierce duel with blistering guitar solos that rival the work of John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra.
The report for Guru Guru's "Dance Of The Flames" focuses on the 1974 original release and the significant 2006 remastered reissue, which is commonly archived in high-fidelity FLAC format. Album Overview Original Release: 2006 Reissue: Released in May 2006 by Revisited Records Jazz-Rock, Fusion, Krautrock, Space Rock Format Notes: The 2006 edition is a remastered CD, often ripped to for lossless preservation. The 2006 Revisited Records Edition
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