It's only Rock 'n Roll, but I like it!
One of the most powerful live albums in my collection. Setting aside the intellectualism of the previous decade (which had indeed given us some wonderful gems), the Kinks lay it all on the line and gift their fans a high-energy live performance. more
Shit. That’s enough. more
Al's most folk soul in a nostalgic and beautifully played album. Forget about "Year of the Cat," this is elegance and class without any commercial gimmicks. more
AOR of great class. Still the best work of the Wilson sisters.
"Crazy on you" still gets me going like it used to. more
If you love Pentangle, you will also love the Yacoub brothers.
Sophisticated arrangements with period and electric instruments fused in harmony and refined vocal harmonies. They studied with Alan Stivell, and you can tell, but they are also very original.
Delightful the 5/4 ronde "Voici là Saint-Jean." more
Icy fire. Not exactly among my favorites, but absolutely seminal. The pairing of "The Sprawl"/"Cross the Breeze" is deadly. more
The best of the goblins, at least in my opinion. Doolittle is more diverse, but it’s definitely not as fun and carefree.
"Break my Body," "River Euphrates," and "Vamos," just to avoid the usual names. more
The worst of world rock together with guns and roses. more
it can't be missing on the deserted island! more
The American Pooh...with the necessary technical-socio-cultural distinctions, of course. Incredible musicians, but...can you tell who sings in one track and who in another?! They have tremendously flattened and similar voices. more
little remains of the early British folk rock....light, on the verge of adequacy more
really beautiful album, Silvestri still very inspired. more
a stunning collection! more
Everything it's capable of in an absolutely fragmented and illogical album. A masterpiece! more
Beautiful to see the CCR twentieths. more
My personal definition of "black metal" along with Sargeist. more
Punk in all its simple and rebellious magnificence. more
The typical novice band. more
They came from Boston, a fertile scene for psychedelia even though the movement was artificially created, just to have an alternative music scene to the Californian one. The Bosstown Sound was the East Coast's response. more