Without definition. more
The Garage 60th was the God and the Chesterfield Kings the prophets. At least the first 3 works are unmissable. more
After that indescribable masterpiece that was "Whiskey For the Holy Ghost," Lanegan cleans himself up and returns with this excellent work of dark folk songs. At the time, I expected more after the previous masterpiece, but this is still quite an excellent album! "Bell Black Ocean" brings tears... more
Ahead light-years. more
Delicious album. The only downside is that crap "Can't Get there from Here." more
The rib of Linkin Park, created by Bennington in 2005, has only one album to its name, the good "Out of Ashes." A mix of hard rock and post-grunge that is quite interesting. more
[3](https://en.debaser.it/main/definizione_artista.aspx?idC=33241
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Five-star jazz & fusion. more
A fusion of considerable merit until the mid-'80s. more
Great individually. Together, just imagine. Dreamlike and visionary pieces. more
Very good. Risotto, from '97 is deadly. Don't be fooled by the title. more
New forms to have for lovers of DrumandbassJazzstep. more
A great producer, DJ, musician, and drum and bass artist, but not only that. "Colours" from '97 is extremely noteworthy. more
Scary. more
Give him an instrument. Will he know how to turn it on? more
Since many like to label them post-rock (at least in Spiderland), I’ll give my own categorization: this is their noise-math rock album. And "Spiderland" is their slowcore album. Both are masterpieces, both are not objectively perfect as some pretentious people would like to believe, both owe a lot to several records in the indie/alternative scene rather than the other way around; yet both are highly individual and have aged perfectly, if not even not aged at all. more
Then we ask ourselves why music is dying... years of work, of people who have given their all to achieve something truly meaningful practically destroyed by this dumb rich kid... what a shitty world. more
I have no clue who they are. I've never even heard their names mentioned. more
Overrated and mythologized a bit too much for sure, but they created, invented, demolished, and renewed POP. I'm not a die-hard fan, but I believe that some of their albums are simply the history of music, and it's not easy to write songs that, after about 50 years, are still known and appreciated by a good part of the people. My favorites remain "Rubber Soul," "Revolver," "Sgt. Pepper's," and "Abbey Road." more