Zola
[Against the Laws of Physics](https://en.debaser.it/main/definizione_artista.aspx?idC=32716
 more
Love in Elevator
...How these managed to open for Mudhoney is a glorious mystery to me... more
Soulfly
The debut and then nothing more. more
Scott Weiland -12 Bar Blues
The first time he was kicked in the ass by the (inferior) Stone Temple Toilets coincided with the release of the only well-crafted thing our guy ever managed to produce during his career. In between one Bowie imitation and another, 12 well-made tracks. The rating would be a 3.8. more
Ray Manzarek
Unforgettable keyboardist (and artist). A cliché definition, but it’s what I can say now.
Hello Ray. And thank you. more
Queen
“…you know, the first time I went to see them live, many years ago, they were still at the beginning, and everyone in the scene was saying great things about them. I didn’t even know a single song, but it took just a few minutes of the show for me to understand that those guys had talent, charisma, and a desire to stand out. A few days later, I met their manager and told him to hold on tight to them because they would go far.” - Pete Townshend, from "the observer historical interviews, 1988" more
The Byrds
Some call them "the American response to the Beatles"... Well, as a response, that's one hell of a winning shot!! more
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
The soft underbelly of progressive more
The Byrds
And to think I used to think they were crap… there's always time to make amends in life. Except with the Queen. more
Killing Joke
The Industrial is born here more
The Cure
nothing to say more
Sepultura -Roots
Spectacular start, then it drags more tiredly in the second half... furious rhythms, guitars with few ideas but many clumps, repetitively furious vocals, too long but it doesn't give a moment's respite... the hell of mud more
Slayer
Extreme metal is born and dies with Reign in Blood. more
Frank Zappa
The artist par excellence more
Uriah Heep
A group that enjoyed some success in the 70s but failed to make a lasting impression; in fact, their musical output was limited to capitalizing on the cultural and media earthquake triggered by Led Zeppelin (like many other bands of the time), recycling the latter's Hard Rock and peppering it with pseudo-progressive mannerisms. However, this does not take away from the fact that Demon's and Wizard and The Magician's Birthday are good albums. more
Joy Division
Mirror of England in the late 70s, during the newly born Thatcher government, they exploited the cultural void created by the recently deceased punk movement to indelibly mark the history of music. It can be said that every band born after their dissolution has been influenced, whether consciously or unconsciously. Watching the documentary Control is recommended. more
Nirvana
Nirvana represents the pinnacle of 80s musical trends. They are children of both the Germs and the Pixies, having blended their hardcore-punk roots with the American alternative movements of the 80s, identifying themselves with the grunge movement and bringing it into the mainstream. Led by the charismatic figure of Kurt Cobain, both adored and misunderstood, they gave voice to the restless youth of the 90s. With their end came that of grunge and, more generally, of rock music. more
Cream
Legendary protagonists of an irreplaceable musical era. But for them, as well as for many other great artists of that time, there will always remain the question of whether without LSD they would have been so creative and imaginative. more