Piero Scaruffi
I'm sorry, but I can't access external links or content. If you provide the text you'd like translated, I'd be happy to help! more
Steve Hackett -Wild Orchids
A good album this "Wild Orchids," within the average output of Hackett's electro-acoustic work. The main flaw of the album is indeed that 17 tracks are too many, and not all are valid, and the extreme stylistic eclecticism of the various songs doesn't help either. This is another characteristic that I both like and dislike in Hackett; for instance, here it seems he takes pleasure in surprising the listener with songs that are vastly different from one another in terms of genres, styles, atmospheres, etc. In the end, I can't help but think that his stylistic signature is to not have one. And while I usually enjoy versatility even within the same album, and appreciate Hackett's versatility as well, sometimes with him it feels excessively forced, as if he has never understood (or maybe simply doesn't care) what exactly to put in his albums. Fortunately, the average quality of the songs here is more than satisfactory. There are acoustic/classical/orchestral pieces (once again the Underworld from the splendid "Metamorpheus") and electric pieces, extremely sweet and wonderfully bucolic soft songs ("To a Close") and edgy, dark tracks, covers of Bob Dylan, and songs that you would never think "Wow, this is Hackett, you can tell" (like "Down Street," which by the way is one of the most beautiful, or "Ego and Id," composed by John Hackett, a classical flautist, and it’s an amazing electric piece...). Recurring musical themes, beautiful songs and others decidedly less so ("Wolfwork"). A bit messy, but it's a good album. more
Linkin Park
People don't understand a thing and they probably haven't even listened to the other albums, but they went on the trust of the haters. A Thousand Suns is the best album without a doubt, perfect concept, something that HT and Meteora, despite their memorable songs, are not. LT and THP are good albums, and then there's OML, which I personally like, but I consider it the worst of the band. more
Francesco Guccini -Via Paolo Fabbri 43
The album that got me down... #absolute masterwork. L'avvelenata and the title track are the ones I'm most attached to, Canzone di notte n2, Piccola storia ignobile, and Canzone quasi d'amore are great pieces. But Il pensionato, with that chaotic ending... Christ. more
Francesco Guccini -Amerigo
A job with high highs and bearable lows. Amerigo and Eskimo are the two gems, they remain one step below 100 Pennsylvania Ave and The Five Ducks. Libera nos domine is there and it’s deep but almost takes a back seat... Mondo nuovo has good ideas but for melodies it’s definitely mediocre (the chorus annoys me terribly). In short, not the best but not the worst either. I’ve finished listening to these that I have at home. I ask for recommendations on which Guccio album to continue with. more
Edoardo Bennato
In the '70s and the first half of the '80s, he was an absolutely (and I emphasize absolutely) great singer-songwriter. He didn’t miss a beat; his albums from the late '80s are also very good. It doesn’t matter to me that he completely lost his inspiration afterward; the works from '73 to '85 were and remain among the greatest masterpieces produced by Italian music. more
Edoardo Bennato -I Buoni e i Cattivi
The most beautiful album by Bennato for me, a marvel of great rock'n'roll or singer-songwriter rock, however you want to put it, is one of the best Italian albums in the "genre." It's an album inspired from the first to the last song, sarcastic, mocking, and sharp in its lyrics, fun in its arrangements (the kazoo is amazing). And "Tira a campare" might just be his most beautiful song. more
Alice Cooper
Ben Stiller? Al Pacino? He looks more like Paolo Mengoli... more
Francesco Guccini -Metropolis
Oh, more structured arrangements do no harm to Guccio's lyrics. For me, this is a great album, well arranged and definitely inspired: masterpieces like Bisanzio, Lager, and Antenore are worth the price, with the two that are just a notch below these three, namely Venezia and Bologna. It's a pity about Black-out, which somewhat ruins the atmosphere that had been created, and Milano, which has an instrumental outro that clearly says, "let's stretch the length a bit." more
Lucio Dalla -Luna Matana
musical crap! Only "Domenico Sputo" and a bit of "Kamikaze" are worth saving. I'm giving it a 2 just for those, otherwise it would have been a 1. more
Pino Daniele -Musicante
the last gasp of the "genius" pino daniele, an immense album. the value would be 4.5, but I gladly give it the missing half point. more
Pino Daniele -Nero A Metà
5? "When it rains", "alleria", "I like the blues", "don’t bother me". Yes, 5. more
Pino Daniele -Bella 'Mbriana
if "terra mia" is the most Neapolitan, this is the most international. A spectacle, perhaps his greatest masterpiece. more
Pino Daniele -Terra mia
Among Daniele's early albums, this is the least original, still very connected to popular tradition, but incredibly inspired. A unique record in the Italian musical landscape. more
Richard Benson
MOOOOOOOOTHER TORTUREEEEEEE more
Fredric Brown
In my opinion, however, in that 0.59223301 of a page that was torn from the last page of that only story, there was the solution to all the mysteries... 🙁 more
Fredric Brown
The inimitable Fredric Brown, the absolute master of short and very short stories.
By performing the simple calculation (866/103), it turns out that on average each story is 8.40776699 pages long.
Therefore, reading CB1&CB2 is recommended for everyone, regardless of taste.
A little curiosity, his cat was named Ming Tah. more
Pino Daniele -Vai mo'
Here Uncle Pino is at the peak, and this represents the third consecutive masterpiece. Extraordinary, even in the super famous tracks like "Yes I Know My Way." "Viento 'e terra" the masterpiece of the album. 9 more
Area -Caution Radiation Area
4.8/5, it barely misses the maximum score. An absolutely fantastic album that unfolds in a crescendo, from the catchiest track to the most cacophonous. When it ends, it leaves you feeling both empty and filled with anger towards society, but also filled with so much joy for having experienced a piece of highly refined art. more