Master of Baroque folk, brilliant in blending blues and folk with Indian music. more
Distressing, claustrophobic. Sublime. more
Musical zenith of the Liverpool quartet, nothing more. more
The album that perhaps best encapsulates the ideals of the Woodstock generation. more
One foot in the blues of Reverend Gary Davis, the other in folk. Unforgettable. more
An excellent and worthy representative of Italian singer-songwriter music, also a great guitarist and master of fingerpicking. Among the many unjustly underrated. more
They are part of that vast sea of American bands that embody the essence of rock'n'roll. Among the genre, they are among the best. more
The record, like the cover, drips blood. more
Pioneering proto-electronic sounds produced by a "scientist" of vibrations (David Vorhaus) + two technicians from the BBC: various noises, breaths and sighs, orgasmic whimpers. The result (the "storm") is shocking to say the least, for 1969. more
The Most High evidently likes David Byrne. However, I don't like him, so what do we do about that...? more
DARK, Scaruffo defines his ballads... but so dark, I add, that they precede Bauhaus and Sisters Of Mercy all at once. Uuh, what am I saying, let's throw in the Cure as well. So dark that when Nick Cave listened to it for the first time, he made the sign of the cross. more
Prologue: I'm not talking about Dave Allan Stewart from the Eurythmics, who unjustly occupies two sections among the artists, but rather about that other one who played with Egg, National Health, Hetfield and the North, etc., in short, the Canterbury Keyboard.
Definition: Wakeman or Emerson? Dave Stewart! more
Splendid acoustic sound, original lyrics, subtle melodies...a little hidden gem. A record to be rediscovered, produced in a transitional historical period. Rating 3.5. more
I believe they haven't invented anything, but they have had a tremendous influence. It seems paradoxical, but Elvis had done the same earlier with rock'n'roll, and the Sex Pistols would do it later with punk. And Steve Jobs with the iPhone. more
I have it on tape, it must be somewhere... they can't have thrown it away! more
Damn, he's so cool! Among his favorite reads are "Les Fleurs Du Mal," "Dorian Gray," and De Sade! What a damn and decadent intellectual, a true genius!! more
The Tool are one of the most relevant names of the grunge era [cit.]
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH. more
Well, "Tutti Morimmo a Stento" (1968), "La Buona Novella" (1970), "Non al Denaro, non all'Amore né al Cielo" (1971), "Storia di un Impiegato" (1973), "Volume VIII" (1975), "Creuza de Ma" (1984), and "Anime Salve" (1996). Not bad, huh? Quite good, indeed. more
I had almost forgotten about him! ahahahahah. Is this idiot still alive? Besides plundering those 4 riffs he recorded in the early 2000s from the Clash's repertoire and playing the "cursed" bohemian from the cover of the Sun (basically the 2000s version of the Brits, if not worse), what the hell has he done? more
Parsley! You can find it practically everywhere, either taking center stage or supporting some of the best artists, with an important role as a talent scout as well. Ubiquitous in the Italian rock scene. In its own right, a beautiful guitar, with a classic sound that is never self-indulgent, it has also had a respectable solo career. more