A must-have for those who follow European weird literature! more
Masterpiece! Buy the version that includes the 2 different versions. more
An intriguing cover album. more
A 360-degree experimenter. more
A great start for anyone wanting to get to know this band! more
For those seeking weird thrills! more
Essential for those who follow Italian avant-garde music. more
The hidden treasure of French speculative literature. more
Ambient music for cosmic travelers. more
The best Italian weird novel? more
Magnificent more
semi-acoustic piece not exceptional a good filler as a facade b more
great song... we're in '71 and in Italy Claudio Villa is being played
this song has a nice drive more
I must say that I like it (almost) as much as "Phenomenon," by a band that firmly establishes itself among the most engaging and valid in the rock/hard scene of the '70s. The initial trio is simply irresistible, and there are other standout songs like the ballad "Belladonna," my favorite "On With the Action" with its grand and "epic" tones in the least tacky sense of the term, and the concluding "Martian Landscape" (which also honors the band's name, eh). All beautiful, highly inspired tracks. The definitive addition of piano and various keyboards is very welcome and adds a superb touch of variety and expressiveness to the band's sound; played on this album (the one with the two records on the cover) by Danny Peyronel, they serve as the perfect complement to Schenker's central guitar and decisively mark a good number of songs, some of which flirt with piano rock (like "Highway Girl," for example, another great song), while others, like "Belladonna," are elegantly enriched. Mogg delivers two or three very nice performances, Schenker shines with a couple of standout moments in some of the aforementioned tracks, and Peyronel significantly contributes as a writer or co-writer to some of the most successful pieces on "No Heavy Petting." Truly a great album, I enjoyed it a lot. more
Black metal in its most ethereal and transcendental form. Two Hunters, my favorite album in the genre, always manages to freeze me with its unique and unparalleled atmospheres. more
Stefano Musso is the guru of ambient music in Italy. more
Well, they have some nice songs... But they are nothing short of disgusting and they really have a shitty singer. more
A splendid album and unfortunately one of their least appreciated and most underrated. Composed during a time of intense tension within the band, it absorbs the frayed nerves, and there’s a veil of gloom, a greater darkness that envelops their typical melodic tapestries, which are particularly inspired here, especially noticeable in some tracks, with the masterful opening "Feeling Gravity Pull" acting as a manifesto of this mood and the great music the four Georgians have produced (as often happens in art, from crises emerge works of immense artistic value). And just as it opens with a masterpiece, it closes in the same manner, with the heartbreaking melancholy of the killer melody "Wendell Gee," one of my favorites in their vast repertoire, which follows the almost equally beautiful "Good Advices." In between, a sequence of beautiful songs is delivered relentlessly to the ears, showcasing their usual delicacy and that extra touch of "tension" I adore in this album ("Life and How to Live It," the fabulous "Auctioneer"). But the other two masterpieces for me are "Driver 8" and "Green Grow the Rushes," must-have diamonds in the R.E.M. discography. more
"Reckoning" is one of the R.E.M. albums that I digested more slowly; for quite a while, it struck me much less than their other works. Then the spark happened. It's beautiful, after all, even if it gets overshadowed by two of their albums that I personally adore, which are "Murmur" and the underrated "Fables...", and compared to which I still like it less, but we're talking about a "less" that is quite relative. There are many beautiful songs, indeed, ranging from anthology-worthy jingles ("7 Chinese Brothers") to perfectly catchy killer choruses ("Don't go Back to Rockville"), extraordinary fusions of their classic melodicism and the 60s acid ballad sound in yet another personal homage to the old masters in "Time After Time (Annelise)" (Buck's guitar here is wonderful), the slow, very calm, melancholy of "Camera," and various scattered gems ("Letter Never Sent," to mention one). While I don't consider it one of their masterpieces, it remains a very valid album that I will return to more frequently in the future. more
I appreciate her straightforwardness, her ability to sing in your face as no one else has the courage to do, as well as her way of narrating certain phenomena. However, she often falls into the rhetoric of political correctness and Nazi-feminism, actively contributing to the phenomenon and making it increasingly pathetic and ridiculous, and that’s where she starts to lose me. more