Together with A Night at the Opera, the best of the best of Marxian comedy. more
A shrewdly naïve masterpiece more
An immortal masterpiece more
Worship of the gangsta tamarri, it’s actually just a decent film. more
Some truly memorable moments, generally a really great film. more
A brilliant band that, with their first three albums, managed to offer us excellent noise-rock-pop, stunning twilight ballads, and intelligent hard rock. Then, unfortunately, the decline. Unmissable. more
unique more
Character useful for the covers of "Le Ore" more
It's pretty nauseating, so half a point extra. 2.5 more
Funny and cheeky interpreters just the right amount more
Impossible to give him more, it would be madness. more
In hindsight, and stripped of historical significance (?), this album is a half disaster, in my opinion, as well as that of the next one. With Carnival, it will be something else, at least for a moment. more
It's not my favorite type of punk-rock, but among the more modern bands in the same scene, Rancid are more than decent. more
A notch above many at the time, with a non-trivial musicality that draws from beat, symphonic pop (Procol Harum?) and something progressive, while still remaining anchored to a fairly straightforward singer-songwriter style. more
I usually try to save something (the voice, a decent song, a good vocal technique...) from every artist I know, no matter how commercial they may be. In this case, aside from the hot chick, there's really nothing worth saving. more
Objectively, it's a commercial album with only a handful of good songs, but I can't give it less than a 3 for sentimental reasons: it's the first album I ever bought, and from this, I've discovered all the artists I listen to now. In short, if this album hadn't existed, I probably would have never developed a passion for music. more
Moderate talent, lovely voice, and a pretty face, it’s just a shame that the songs aren’t always up to par. more
Vintage chick. more
If the Beatles had fused with Earth Wind and Fire.
Assuming for the "details" the Berlin Philharmonic and Alan Parsons, in the meantime. more