"San Quentin, what good do you think you do?/Do you think I'll be different when you're through?"... it takes real guts to write powerful lyrics like these, a punch right in the stomach. I can't give an objective rating. PS: Gorgeous cover. more
California group that blends a mix of eclectic, fun, and very enjoyable styles. more
Disciples and lovers of early Pink Floyd fused integralist psychedelia with punk rock sounds; perhaps we are at the dawn of Stoner? more
Successful songs, limited duration (which is a plus, given the genre), a bit less striking the vocal parts... but they were never the strong point of the Dead. Anyway, a great album. more
After that masterpiece of "God's Dick," this sort of commune of drugged-out hippies returns with an equally great work. Slightly more polished than the previous one, but just as acid and delirious, perhaps more "prog," whether consciously or not. Another milestone of German krautrock psychedelia. more
A precious blues gem, featuring a demonic leader backed by Robert Cray's band, playing with clarity and conviction. more
Great album, with the highlight of I've Been Everywhere concluding a well-balanced sequence of songs between intimacy and energy. more
Don't wake him up! He thinks he's still living in the '60s! A Legend! more
an unjustly forgotten group from the English hard rock scene, they too contributed to the birth of future Metal. more
with its tribal rhythms marked like a mining TAM TAM, it is perhaps the greatest. Legend. more
from the fathers of English blues rock, a stellar cast that will influence all music to come. more
rock ignorant, sometimes you just need that too more
On par with Soundgarden, the best band of the musical movement that emerged in Seattle in the late eighties; Superfuzz Bigmuff for life. more
Alongside Mudhoney, the best band to emerge from Seattle at the end of the eighties; and here I stop... more
The live album that best celebrates the farewell of Dire Straits; an album that once again confirms how in concerts Mark Knopfler's band could blend elegance and musical expertise, enchanting the audience with songs made even deeper and always meticulously detailed. A setlist that mostly features songs from the last two studio albums; and it is the poetry in the music of "Brothers In Arms" that marks the end of the show. more
I MISS YOU... more
Intimate and desolate dark industrial folk, somewhat repetitive in its lyrics and songs. more
If the world turned properly, they would be more famous than the Beatles. Crazy wild ones they should have been, the Beatles. Legendary. more
More of a stage presence than for listening, pompous and rhetorical, requiring careful evaluation. more
Disciples of cultured electronics, pioneers of electronic and industrial pop are the true friction between man and machine. Legendary. more