Baphomet
When the voices within you speak of an end, when the mind says you have lost, when you believe it is impossible, yet you continue and rise on your sword, and take yet another step—there is where Man ends. There is where God begins. (Order of the Knights of the Sacred Temple) more
Commodore 64
How cool... to belong to the first generation that witnessed games like Gryzor, Ninja Spirit, Myth, Double Dragon, Last Ninja, Shinobi materialize in their own homes, and in the coming years, Golden Axe, Double Dragon II, when years earlier you could only admire them in arcades. Sure, not at the same level, but still pretty awesome... more
Vangelis -Sex Power
Vangelis' solo debut, a very enjoyable soundtrack but nothing exceptional; I’ll stick with my rating because he has since produced much better than this pleasant little debut. more
Björk
The most classic 'good job but enough' more
PokéMon
The games of the first two generations and their respective remakes are HUGE. I've only played the later series occasionally, so I can't really comment properly. It's a shame, though, that the cartoon is something indecent. more
PokéMon
If you were born between '90 and '95 and give a 1 to Pokémon, you had a shitty childhood. Back in elementary school, all we did was play Game Boy and trade cards after cards, good times... more
PokéMon
But 5. I think I was the only fool to raise only bug Pokémon. They are the weakest of all. more
PokéMon
Cause and at the same time fruit of serious mental problems.. more
PokéMon
Those who still waste time on us and are over 10 years old (and unfortunately THERE ARE, and many) truly make me feel so, so sorry. more
PokéMon
I loved the cartoon, it's one of the fondest memories of my childhood, and I really enjoyed the game from Pokémon Red and Blue to the fourth generation. For me, it died with the fifth generation. However, catching Mewtwo without a Master Ball in Pokémon Yellow still has a certain effect... more
Peter Gabriel -4
The full maturity of the post-Genesis inheritance more
Peter Gabriel -II
An album with the power of a hammer to the face. more
Peter Gabriel -III
A masterpiece more
Beck -Sea changes
The perfect record. more
Bill Laswell -Hear no evil
This music sustains us in every way. Often, it's even questionable. Sometimes, hating it is all too easy. But for this album, the inspiration must have been miraculous. Just like the balance between the musicians. The sound and atmosphere are magical and suspended, in time and space. A journey with closed eyes, anywhere, in the most secret folds of oneself. Bill, but really, what kind of person are you? A bit strange, like the sound of your bass, unlike any other. more
Captain Beefheart -The spotlight kid/Clear spot
The more you enter his world, think in his way, the more you understand how ahead of his time he was. Too ahead. Ungrammatical guitars, scattered ignorant percussion, diffuse time, the voice mistreated by a falsetto to a hideous gurgle. More creative, anti-conformist, an ante litteram of the same Zappa. Pervaded by a background of sadness and despair exorcized by mockery and heavy wordplay at the edge of comprehensibility. A monster. Of solitude. more
Frank Zappa -Sleep Dirt
Published against his will, therefore all the more zappian as it is foreign to the not unwitting musical architecture built by the Duke of Prunes. Lather returns it for what it should have been, but heard in a dirty and inappropriate way as it was at the end of the '80s, this record, probably not intended in that form by its very author, contains miraculous pills of every musical genre, even of genres yet to be invented. Enlightening. more
Booker T. & The MG's -The Best of Booker T. & The MG's
To be enjoyed alone on a warm night, sipping Southern Comfort. more
Leslie
The sound of a Hammond would never have been so wonderful without a Leslie Speaker inside. more