Where the Rose Is Sown. more
Minor and less appreciated album by the Duke, it doesn't hold up against later masterpieces like "Never Let Me Down"... Well, what can I say about Ziggy, which is his second masterpiece, a fully inspired Bowie with a perfectly tight band, the Martian arachnids, and is it just a matter of details that I slightly prefer "Hunky Dory" and "Aladdin Sane" from his early '70s period? That the character/artist/alter-ego was a stroke of genius? Come on, why do I even say it... A symbol of "Glam," etc. Songs of collective imagination (super famous "Starman") and simply beautiful songs ("Moonage Daydream," "Lady Stardust," "Ziggy Stardust," "Rock'n Roll Suicide," etc.) more
The worst country in Western Europe, with the highest rate of functional illiterates and pieces of shit. The Vomit. more
Heirs of the dark prog tradition of Jacula and connoisseurs of the works of the writer and initiate Gustav Meyrink: a true cult band! more
"Krampusnacht comes,
But once a year.
But these melodies will haunt you forever!" more
The album is quite dull and at times irritating, but for me "Amore senza fine" is a gem and it risks saving an album unworthy of the Pino we know. more
perhaps the weakest of Lennon. more
They are the One Direction of the '60s, a mediocre group, massively hyped by the press. Horrifying. more
Face down - ass up - That's the way I like to fuck...need anything else? Miamiiiiii more
For a listening experience in 2018, I’ll save the slower tracks, except for the first one which stays! So no Curami, VAliumTavor Serenase and the like. more
didgeridoo a go-go and mantra with thumping bass and little guitars... not the usual synthetic sound but almost more
My Genesis album from a desert island, I wouldn't cut a single note. Even the simplest track, 'Time Table', has impact, as well as beautiful musical moments (the tick to the "bell"), just like the other songs. Aside from the opening of Watcher, the continuation is superb: a driving melody supported by Collins' evocative and adrenaline-filled drumming; Get 'em is a brilliant theatrical performance, but the flute solo is the most poignant moment. Horizons, on the other hand, encapsulates Hackett's delicacy and good taste. more
Masterpiece! more
its peak! more
The first great album by Bowie from start to finish, although it still doesn't quite reach the heights of "Hunky Dory" and onwards. Some truly wonderful tracks and a band that was already very tight, although only partly made up of the Spiders from Mars that would come later. Essential work in the arrangements of the album and in the composition of the tracks by the great Mick Ronson and the producer and bassist Tony Visconti; Ronson's guitar in particular is, for me, the cherry on top of the first great Bowie, a sound that I personally love, recognizable after half a second, after half a note. A great album which would be followed by further advancements, and that’s saying something, isn’t it? more
"Only a hundred people bought the first Velvet Underground record, but each of those hundred today is either a music critic or a rock musician." Whoever came up with this sentence forgot to add "of crap" at the end. Mediocre stuff. more
from the Boss I want more!!! more
Someone that no mother would want her daughter to bring home as a prospective (future) son-in-law. more
Unmatched. She had it all: class, irony, charm, beauty, comedic timing... more