Nicolas Winding Refn
When silence truly communicates more
Wes Anderson
Mr. Symmetry more
Takashi Miike
The master more
Fairport Convention -Liege & Lief
milestone of English folk-rock! more
Depeche Mode
Among the most versatile bands of the 80's/90's music scene (at least partly), he is definitely one of the best frontmen of all time. more
Roger Daltrey
One of the souls of The Who, the Woodstock live performance perhaps the pinnacle of his career The Who -- See Me, Feel Me -- Live at Woodstock 1969 immense also in the subsequent Who's Next and in Quadrophenia.
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Don Henley
One can't help but hum Boys of Summer, One of These Nights, and Hotel California while watching it; this is more than enough to define its greatness. more
Mercanti di liquore
A piece of my childhood, a cornerstone of my love for folk and music in general. more
Marillion -Season's End
Via Fish, the new genesis of Marillion starts from this masterpiece of the H era.
Is it difficult to maintain continuity and novelty after the earthquake? Mission accomplished! more
Eugenio Finardi -Diesel
one of the albums of my life! more
John Edward Williams -Stoner
it seems like a good read... more
Ozzy Osbourne -Diary Of A Madman
14/02/2019 - Thanks to my Rosaspina :) more
Giorgia -Mtv Unplugged
beautiful and good! more
Richard Thompson -Across A Crowded Room
Another great album for Thompson in the midst of the '80s. This album can be considered a bit of a younger sibling to the masterpiece "Hand of Kindness" (which remains a record of sublime inspiration that this one doesn’t quite reach, it would be asking too much) since in various songs it follows that same musical and thematic trail. In this sense, three particularly successful and irresistibly lively tracks are "I Ain't Going to Drag My Feet No More," the energetic "Fire in the Engine Room" (with a fierce opening), and "She Twists the Knife Again," but traditional ballads like "When the Spell is Broken" and "Walking Through a Wasted Land" are also beautiful, the latter, in my opinion, bearing the "stigmata" of a classic. However, it presents some substantial differences from the "older brother": on one hand, there are some concessions to more explicitly pop songs, though always "refined" and enjoyable ("Shine on Love" I like a lot). On the other hand, there is a mood that wasn't present in the previous album, darker and more somber, which particularly shines in the concluding and stunning "Love in a Faithless Country," a magnificent song. The sounds unleashed by his guitar are incredible as always; I love Thompson's guitar style (or styles), always balancing between originality/innovation and classicism. After all, this album is in a transitional phase that comes after and precedes his collaborations with David Thomas and Fred Frith. In short, a really great album. A guarantee. more
Frank Zappa
The most authentic artist in the history of rock. A stratospheric guitarist, a badass artist, an excellent live performer, at least 3 masterpiece albums. In short, the one, the only, and unimitable Frank Zappa! more
Gentle Giant -Three Piece Suite
Concentrated of the splendid debut Trilogy reworked technologically on BRD more
Genesis -1980-06-19: The Forum, Montreal, QC, Canada
Duke's tour, Collins is clowning around, sound quality is adequate...the only positive note, a nice version of Ripples. more
Simone Cristicchi
An artist who is proving to be deep and sensitive. Even when the cameras are off, a delightful person and a beautiful soul. more
Arsenij Aleksandrovic Tarkovskij
"Weakness is strength and strength is nothing.
When a man is born, he is weak and supple.
When he dies, he is strong and rigid.
Just like the tree, while it grows, is tender and flexible
and when it dies, it is hard and dry.
Rigidity and strength are companions of death,
weakness and flexibility express the freshness of existence." more