The Flaming Lips -Transmissions from the Satellite Heart
The first time I listened to it, I didn’t understand a thing. The second time, neither. Maybe that’s why I liked it so much! more
Steve Hackett -Voyage Of The Acolyte
With a sound very reminiscent of Genesis. But I love it anyway! more
Black Sabbath -Paranoid
In super-mega-ultra-hyper-fuck deluxe edition! more
Miles Davis -Kind of Blue
I should listen to it more times, I still can't love it enough. more
Kate Bush
Wonderful more
William Wyler -How to Steal a Million
3.5/4. Good comedy with the usual Hepburn guarantee. more
Rush -Hemispheres
Just for "La Villa Strangiato," it deserves a front-row seat among the historic records of prog. more
Deftones -Koi no yokan
The Deftones never disappoint. One love for Chi Cheng! more
Marillion -Sounds That Can't Be Made
The best of the Hogarth era, right after Brave. more
The Fugs
Anarcoids..not DeFinable! more
Roberto Benigni
Apart from "The Little Devil," as a director he doesn't amount to anything. more
The Smoke
Nice English band active since '65, distorted sound, simple yet catchy choruses, they're enjoyable to listen to. more
Suck
South Africans who managed to poorly cover both Black Sabbath and Deep Purple and Donovan on the same album. What a load of crap. more
The Fugs
Zappa before Zappa, but angrier and crazier. Holy shit people, it's the Fugs! more
The Godz
The dumbest and at the same time the most difficult band of all time. You can only love them. more
The Sonics
After an album like "Here Are The Sonics!!!," all the other garage bands sounded to the ear more or less like the Santo California, or at best like the Cugini Di Campagna. more
Donovan
A Scottish hippie wandering between pop and rock, undeniably brilliant, extroverted, sweet, sensitive, he’s not Dylan; at best, he’s Dylan on dextromethorphan hallucinations. Excuse the understatement. more
Arthur Brown
Fire on stage, in the music, in the lyrics, but above all in the balls. If there's a God to worship only when drunk, that is Arthur Brown. more
The Move
For Roy Wood, they were the last step towards the ELO, for English music one of the most eclectic and polymorphic bands of the late '60s. more
Rare Bird
One of the most overlooked and fascinating ensembles of early English prog. Brilliant, unique, rare. more