Remembered for just one damn song, quite cheerful if we’re being honest. Is this music? more
The Queen. more
The Bob you know is a huge fan of this Bob. Could it be that Dylan understands English and has heard the albums? Nah, it must be that Dylan smokes weed. more
In Rock, he is second only to Keith Richards. more
I only know one Bob...and it's not this one! more
Almost as sexy as Carlo Cimmino. more
No bullshit... a genius at being an actor. more
If you listen to it when you're 14 and you've just smoked your first joint, that's fine... but if you keep listening to it after 18... well, you’re in bad shape! more
Interesting gadget, but I’m more intrigued by the Tesla coil.. Once it even shocked me.. more
From the unforgettable collaboration with Peter Gabriel ("In Your Eyes" "Passion") to the one with Pupo! Bah... Anyway, very interesting, especially his early albums. more
You are mistaken. The problem is that, alas, it's a very metal site and not very ruack. Mick Jagger, in any case, is roughly 50% of the Stones. more
A superlative discography, enriched by that gem of rare beauty which is Pawn Hearts, for one of the greatest bands of all time! more
..guys GREAT SLAM!!..everyone 5...amazing!! more
..I mean I see some "ones" at Mick Jagger..the quintessence of the rock frontman in a place where the most loved genre is RUOCK!!..I have no words! more
Exhaustive. They come back after more than 20 years and still have the courage to surprise. more
The heart-wrenching and dreamlike voice of Peter Hammill (a poet in the genre) and the furious sax of David Jackson elevate the Generator to the Olympus of progressive rock: "Pawn Hearts" is one of those absolute masterpieces for a desert island. Let’s not forget the dark "The Least We Can Do Is Wave To Each Other" and the scientific "H to He, Who Am I The Only One"; the sunny "Still Life," the paranoid "World Record," and the black jewel "Godbluff" are also very beautiful. "Vital" is a brutal and bloody epitaph. more
I love her too, but only when she's framed at an angle between zero and thirty-five degrees. more
A substantial instigator, never vulgar, of transformism and ambiguity until '82-83. He makes a graceful comeback in the first half of the '90s. Following the wonderful "L'imperfetto" (1994), he scatters a handful of gems here and there, but from that point on he becomes excessively repetitive. more
I don't like him at all; I find him excessive and showy. I suspect that without the drugs, he would just be a shriveled old man. more