Monday, January 4, 2021

Guru Guru - 1976 - Tango Fango

Guru Guru
1976
Tango Fango



01. Tomorrow
02. Tango fango
03. Soba soave bossanova
04. Un, deux, trois
05. Nightbear
06. Banana flip
07. L. torro
08. Salto Mortadella
09. Das lebendige Radio
10. Rattenfänger

Ingo Bischof / keyboards
Tommy Goldschmidt / percussion
Sepp Jandrisits / guitar
Jogi Karpentiel / bass
Mani Neumeier / drums, keyboards, producer
Roland Schaeffer / synthesizer, guitar 


With their 8th studio album GURU GURU continued to explore Latin/Fusion sound that they started on the previous efforts. The music is ever more complex with increasing use of assorted percussions, keyboards, synths and saxophones, courtesy mainly of multi- instrumentalist Rolland Schaeffer. However, this album is not very strong. With its frequent take on light samba/bossa nova sound, at times it is close to easy-listening Muzak. What keeps it back on track is omnipresent Mani's humour and satire, which reminds us that we are not listening to some Brazilian "riviera-style" samba/jazz. "L Torro" takes us back to the best moments of "Dance of the Flames", while the experimental "Das Lebendige Radio" is sort of a filler on this album, although I (with my limited German language skills) assume the satiric view of "Madagascaran accordion players helping bring Deutsche Demokratische Republik and West Germany back together again" was really funny at those times of divided Germany. GURU GURU made "Tango Fango" sound close to Frank Zappa/Mothers' fusion instrumentation with hilarious lyrics and it even reminds me of a unique ex-Yugoslav/Slovenian avant band BULDOZER, who also mocked their Alpine/Mittel-European legacy. "Tango Fango" is surely recommended to give it a listen.

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