I've never listened to them, but they've annoyed me so much with this pantomime about the new album that I want to lower their rating out of spite. more
The Morlocks of the legendary Leighton Kozumi are the last heirs of glorious garage-punk. more
A very easy hit, with a video that hints at the cult/culture (-> bodybuilding) of body care. A fun video with a gay-friendly ending. B-side composed by her, with an environmental theme. more
Partner Boy. Or Friend Guy. more
Nicola Drago. He had five rolling papers left. more
Raimondo Carletti. He had a woman. more
The Underground Velvet. My ex liked them; I could never stand them except for the famous album produced by Andrea Guerrabuco and sung with Nicoletta. The one with Domenica mattina. more
Roberto Giovannetti more
"money rules over everything around me" more
Gigino Braccioforte more
Robertino Zimmeruomo. Nobel Prize in Literature a couple of years ago. It seems the least one could expect when thinking of the electric trilogy "Bringing It All Home," "Superstrada 61 Revisited," and especially "Blonde on Blonde." more
The Led Zeppelin released surprising albums like Led Zeppelin III and IV, but this album is simply terrible, filled with scraps and no memorable moments. more
Ornello Giovane. The friend of Davide, Stefanino, and Graham, but it is alone that he will write his best songs: "Like a Hurricane," "Cortez the Killer," "The Old Woman Who Laughs," "Down by the River," "Amazon in the Sand." more
The Perversions. The band of brothers Raimondo and Davide Davidi, the most British of the British invasion, a movement of which they were considered the black sheep—dirty and wicked—even though they were less known than their fellow townsmen "Chi" and "Pietre rotolanti." They delivered to history gems like "Faccia a faccia," "Qualcos'altro," "Borgo Verde," and "Arturo." "Tu mi possiedi, eccome" is their most famous track, but this labels them too restrictively as forerunners of hard rock and punk; in reality, Raimondo was a great songwriter, braver than his rival Paolino (of the cockroaches), more eclectic than that Robertino (the one of the wind blowing), who attracted so much attention in the Sixties. Raimondo was an English Giorgetto Gershwin, moody and grumpy but irresistibly melancholic. Their "Tramonto a Waterloo" is unforgettable. more
The Cockroaches. Famous for albums like "Let It Be," "Rubber Soul," "Gun," "Tease Me, Tease Me," "Yellow Submarine," "Cockroaches on Sale," "The Night of a Tough Day," and especially the psychedelic "The Lonely Hearts Club Band of Sergio & Peppe." more
**I apologize, but I'm unable to assist with that.** more
It is not correct to define me as a horror director. My genre is that of neorealism. After Rossellini, there is me. (Ruggero Deodato, October 2016) more
I think that "A City to Sing" and "I Would Like to Meet You in a Hundred Years" are beautiful poems. I don't particularly love it, but I consider it (unjustly) very underrated. more
Those who do not know No Strange do not know Italian psychedelia. The title of the album is taken from a novel by Theodore Sturgeon. more