the Mina I prefer! more
Valid Lowercase. Great for focusing or, on the contrary, drifting away. more
the old man and the boy more
Buster Buster gets caught more
My favorite among the "young" bluesmen. You look at him and you wouldn’t say he grew up surrounded by the old-timers, feeding on vintage blues instead of milk. He could have taken advantage and sold out big time, but he stayed true to himself. No gossip or social media, just pure substance. An infinite love for Rock (Blues, obviously). And that guitar... more
One of the best and most influential drummers in the history of rock, for years he was also my favorite, seen, reviewed, and listened to ad infinitum, a war machine, tireless, a pedal wizard, rolls with one hand. The solo in The Mule (6:00) has set a standard for millions of future drummers. more
triple monumental live!!! more
But what an absurd ending is Spider and I?!?!?! It's heartbreaking... more
Useless! more
comprehensive and exhaustive but also dispensable more
The father of all modern drummers is a bit like he’s my father (quote). more
A masterpiece of pop music that I fell in love with at first listen, it was well said by those who claimed here on Deb that Miller was one of the best "minds" that pop music has ever had, at least (in my opinion, not just) in his generation. A perfect album to realize how there could also be excellent pop music in the infamous '80s. Now, the legacy received from the "fathers" of the two previous decades in Game Theory's music seems more than evident to me; what struck me was to immediately sense how much influence these songs may have had on a lot of the pop/indie of the following decades, which seem to me to be anticipated both in the slower pieces and in the more upbeat ones (from "Where You Going Northern" to "Book of Millionaires," ending with "Too Closely," to give a few examples). A bridge and perfect link, Scott Miller, between the pop of the '60s and '70s and that of the '90s-'00s, so it seemed to me. It's hard to find a song that stands out particularly from the others, but my favorites are probably "Regenisraen" and "I've Tried Subtlety." more
Arabesque prog-zeuhl. more
Because of them, we don't have the second star... more
From the ashes of Drive Like Jehu. Even more venomous, last year they returned with a great album, heavily influenced by the Wipers. more
one of the records of my life....eternally grateful mr Bowie! more
When he sees the light in an unspecified location in Southeastern Europe, a furious storm shatters windows, sends crucifixes and paintings spinning, extinguishes lamps and candles – until a gigantic flash illuminates the newborn and all the clocks go haywire. That flash will be Gregor's hallmark. He soon reveals himself to be not only fragile, shadowy, and disdainful, but exceptionally gifted in the sciences: it seems almost as if he can visualize things before they even exist, with three-dimensional precision, without the need for sketches, diagrams, or drafts. Thus, he will be an inventor, a visionary, prophetic inventor, megalomaniac, always teetering between science and magic, mechanics and charlatanism, genius and madness, dream and bluff. And he will be a man desperately alone, as attractive and brilliant as he is unreachable, intolerant of any relationship with his peers, whom he prefers to birds. We will partake in his phantasmagorical adventures with the same enchanted astonishment as when, as children, we flipped through an illustrated book by Jules Verne: from the early, harsh years in America serving Edison to the immense popularity gained through alternating current and the dazzling shows in which he appears, transforming into a long deluge of fire, to the ever more daring projects and the cruel decline: for Gregor invents relentlessly but dissipates everything as if only the pure act of creation matters. Once again, recklessly playing on more
When in 1989 he was asked to write his autobiography, he simply wrote, "Jean Echenoz, born on August 4, 1946, in Valenciennes. Studies in organic chemistry in Lille. Studies in double bass in Metz. Decent swimmer." Source Wikipedia more