The Beatles -Sgt. Pepper
The most famous Beatles album, but not the best. more
UFO -PHENOMENON
When you feel like listening to Hard Rock, it's Hard Rock and nothing else. This is the album you need. Great Hard Rock from beginning to end. Great album. more
Nostradamus
Have you read the opening of the latest review "H.P. Lovecraft: II" by ranofornace?
He was a visionary (like Arthur Rimbaud), he had predicted his end, or perhaps signed his death warrant. more
Lisa Gerrard
Ultraterrestrial. The most thrilling voice ever. more
Francesco De Gregori -La donna cannone
Twenty minutes of perfection. more
The Doors -Other Voices
A good album, in which Jim Morrison is not physically present, but is there ideally. more
Graham Coxon -A+E
A crazy, stinging, and visionary mix of alternative rock, post-punk, noise rock, pop rock, new wave, and psychedelia, created by a forty-three-year-old who writes and plays with the attitude of a twenty-year-old undergoing a full creative catharsis. Brilliant, just like its creator. more
motorpsycho -timothy's monster
An album that contains tracks like "Kill some day," "Leave it like that," "Giftland," "Watersound," and "The golden core" can only be a 5. "Trust Us" remains my favorite by Motorpsycho, but this one comes right after. more
Al Bano & Romina Power
The biggest power metal band in the universe, the drimfiater make them look like a joke. more
Paolo Conte -Paris Milonga
...don't miss for anything in the world the variety show of someone in love with you... more
Deep Purple
They drag you across endless galaxies only to kick you squarely in the ass and set you on fire with the power of their rock. more
Al Bano & Romina Power
A believable and united couple just like Lorella Cuccarini and Marco Columbro! more
James Brown
One of the greatest innovators of the twentieth century, before him (chronologically) only Hank Williams. more
Michael Moorcock
Author of Elric, one of the most brilliant characters in all of fantasy genre. more
Al Bano & Romina Power
Love affairs are like farts: when they end, they always leave a hint somewhere. more
Brian Ritchie -The Blend
Among the solo albums of the three from Milwaukee, this is definitely the most successful. At the time, it eased my disappointment over the brief breakup of the parent group. Brian unleashes all his passions—Sun Ra's jazz, ethnic music... A record full of exhilarating moments, starting from the ethnic rap of "Alphabet" to "Feast of Fools" and the cover of Sun Ra's "Nuclear War." more
John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers -Bluesbreakers With Eric Clapton
Impeccable Blues/Rock album from 1966, the result of the incredible talent factory that is John Mayall's collective. Here it’s Eric Clapton's turn (a monster guitarist at least in those years), who had already cut his teeth with the Yardbirds. On bass is John McVie, the first piece of the embryonic Fleetwood Mac (the following year, Green and Fleetwood would come to Mayall's doorstep), ziogatto. A fantastic album. more
Teenage Fanclub -Grand Prix
Having elected their "Bandwagonesque" as the best album of 1991 (Spin) probably didn’t bring them much luck. Indeed, that year was a rare grace period with a series of masterpiece albums (Loveless, Screamadelica, Blood Sugar Sex Magik, Achtung Baby... to name just a few). This work from '95 represents the best synthesis of the Power Pop of the Scottish group, from Big Star (About You) to the Beatles of "Revolver". For nostalgics and beyond. more
Arto Lindsay
you are just messing around more
Ellie Goulding
Something of his isn't bad at all (some tracks like "My Blood" and "Atlantis", despite being commercial and repetitive, are actually quite good), too bad that live it turns out to be rather lackluster (and not that hot either)! more