Anathema -Universal
The pinnacle of a fabulous band's career. more
Carlo Verdone
After "Cursed be the day I met you," he could have easily turned to horse racing because he had definitively run out of ideas and inspiration. Before that, he was quite enjoyable, at least 5 films that are gems of bittersweet comedy (with "School Friends" as the peak). And in the sketches from the late '70s and '80s, he was very funny. more
Phil Collins
5 for the drummer who was, for a decade, among Genesis, Brand X and collaborations as a session man with Brian Eno, Robert Fripp, his friend Gabriel and giants of the genre. For me, he was also quite good as a singer until the early '80s, and yes, for someone like me who enjoys pop, his first two solo albums are definitely not bad at all. In my appreciation, I won’t go further. more
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Actually, he's not dead; now he goes by Devis Mangia and coaches the Under-21 team. more
Dream Theater
Strippers with limited endowments performing theatrically, original name California Dream Theater. more
Ulver -Nattens Madrigal
Forget about the Order of the Werewolf and other satanic nonsense! The true lycanthropy lies right here, in a simple black lo-fi metal record! more
Alexander "Skip" Spence
"Oar" is unmissable. more
Dream Theater
The rustproof mascots of Debasio. more
Bob Dylan
Fuck the detractors, from 1963 to 1966 he produced an impressive sequence of masterpieces (also of incalculable influence, by the way), a sequence that for me peaks with "Highway 61 Revisited." Then, after "Blonde on Blonde," begins the rollercoaster phase of his career. He still gifted us with two more masterpieces ("Blood on the Tracks" and "Desire") anyway, and they are not the only other great albums post-'60s ("Time Out of Mind" is from '97). more
Claudio Baglioni
"Beyond" is the only decent album in I don't know how many decades of career. Nice achievement. more
Deep Purple
In Rock is an absolute masterpiece, one of the peaks of Hard Rock. Then, in the studio because MIJ is an amazing live album, they never repeated those heights, although almost all the albums up to 1975 are good/very good. I also appreciate the albums from '68-'69. After that, they could have broken up. For good. more
Robin Williams
"The Legend of the Fisher King." more
Sir Anthony Hopkins
"The Elephant Man" "The Silence of the Lambs" "What Remains of the Day". more
Ozzy Osbourne
A shit singer like few others, no one could have been better than him as the vocalist on the first 5 Sabbaths. He held out as long as Butler's inspiration and good Tony's lasted, then he became useless. As a solo artist, he revealed all his flaws. For a long time a clown far from amusing. But his voice on those 5 albums... more
Roger Waters
"A Saucerful of Secrets." Do you remember when you composed a significant portion of such a masterpiece? Fuck his paranoia, his goddamn wall, and The Final Cut, long live cosmic journeys. more
Rino Gaetano
4 very pleasant discs. more
Johnny Depp
Great actor, sometimes a superb one (Dead Man) until, who knows, until 2002. Too bad he then forgot it. Now a terrible living cartoon. more
The Who
Damn, how much I adore them. more
Tom Hanks
Two or three really great performances and then a lot of mediocrity. more