Jethro Tull
An agronomist with a flair for composing brilliant music. more
Tears for Fears
one of the best pop and new wave bands of the '80s. more
Dio
when he gets angry, he reminds me a bit of Sgarbi... more
Black Mountain
Inspired and concrete. more
Tom Morello
a genius and an inventor of sounds like few others more
Ian Curtis
tormented and lost spirit... a heavy loss too early. more
Bathory
Quorthon had fun and shared with us his theater that is now satanic and now neopagan. Too bad that some idiot, especially in northern Europe, took it literally. more
Fabrizio De André
I am at a loss for words in the face of his immense words. more
Ian Curtis
The connection between new wave and dimensions that transcend the degrading banality of the everyday is represented by its immortal voice. more
Peter Steele
He leaves the one who said what we all thought but for a thousand reasons, we couldn't say. more
Peter Steele
You're dying
I masturbate more
Eric Clapton
He wrote the history of rock blues, he has immense merits, but as a solo artist, he hasn't always lived up to expectations. Nevertheless, the blues owes him a great deal. more
Peter Gomez Marco Lillo Marco Travaglio
Journalists with a capital J. more
Brian Johnson
To put it in his own words: "being in AC/DC was a hell of a stroke of luck," what prevailed was the bloodiness of his character, he fit perfectly with the other members. For the first albums, he was absolutely up to the task of his extremely heavy role, then he faded away, losing a large part of his voice, but he remains an excellent substitute for the incomparable Bon Scott. more
Malcolm Young
The leader and the deus ex machina of AC/DC, isn't that enough? Universally regarded as one of the greatest rhythm guitarists in history, without him rock would have taken a different path. more
Angus Young
The eternal schoolboy of hard rock n' roll/hard blues, amphetamine riffs and solos against the grind of modern life. more
Gary Barlow
The Cicciobombo by Take That. more
Herbert von Karajan
a general unequivocally in command more
Richard Bona
With the soul. more
Paul McCartney
john towers over everything, but probably most of the Beatles' masterpieces wouldn't exist without him. From a certain point onward, he became the leader and the band was kept afloat almost single-handedly. As a solo artist, little to nothing. more