Green Day
I don't love punk for its own sake, but hearing them say that they represent it makes me hate it even more. more
Iron Maiden
Five full and a fuck you to all the hipster assholes. more
David Gilmour
Surely my favorite Floyd and, along with Markino and Jimi, my favorite guitarist. more
John Hiatt
One of the great American singer-songwriters, without a doubt. more
Max Pezzali
If I gave 1 to D'Alessio and 2 to Ron, I must give 3 to Max Pezzali. more
Tim Buckley -Live at the Troubadour 1969
Live incredibly beautiful (just like the one in London the year before, by the way) that represents a delicious live preview of the more experimental Buckley that would arrive shortly after. Aside from an unstoppable, wild, fiery, and mesmerizing "Gipsy Woman," the true gem is "I Don't Need it to Rain," which unfortunately will find space only in a live setting and never get a spot on a studio album. The previews (3/5) of "Lorca" are delightful (exceptionally rendered for "Driftin" and "I Had a Talk With My Woman") with an extensive and engaging "Nobody Walkin," and simply chilling are the two tracks from "Blue Afternoon": the marvelous "Blue Melody" and "Chase The Blues Away." One of the two essential live recordings for Buckley fans. more
Hipster
Hipsterian Aphorisms:

"Did you know that breathing is mainstream?" more
Fausto Leali
A croaky voice, if one could call it that, and sappy, superficial songs. I like "Ti Lascerò" mainly for Oxa, the rest is something stupid, not very catchy, and why not, rather vulgar. more
Tim Buckley -Lorca
Along with "Starsailor," my favorite album by Tim. The dark abysses into which Buckley's increasingly free and daring vocal experiments dive in the title track are simply extraordinary, a stream of consciousness even bolder than that of "Love From Room 109" from two years prior. His Voice in "Anonymous Proposition" literally liquefies a simple, yet beautiful, crooner-like melody. "Driftin" follows the same path but in a less extreme way, with an exceptional melody and a vocal performance that is indescribable in its grandeur and maturity. The remaining two tracks are more linear and classic, balancing the sunlit yet melancholic serenity of "I Had a Talk With My Woman" with the "groovy" moment of "Nobody Walkin," which just throws it away... For me, one of the most beautiful albums of the entire '70s. more
Ron
A ridiculously unfortunate and soporific Italian double of Jackson Browne more
RPWL -Start The Fire - Live
truly impressive these Germans from a prog soul. more
The Style Council -Confessions of a Pop Group
one of the most underrated works of the SC...high-level white soul accompanied by an intimate, spine-chilling side more
Finley
Strange that I haven't found one of their records in the chip bag yet. more
Jalisse
The milf who sings would fit in, but they are defined by their bad luck and their only song is awful even to dogs. more
Alunni del Sole
The Sun must not have taught him so well. more
Iron Maiden
Disgusting more
Area
Probably the best non-pop Italian band. Leading the way in the search for the strangest and most avant-garde sounds, never a hit to make money, always admirers of genres that have contaminated their music even though they seemingly have nothing to do with progressive rock and... damn, instrumentally they've always been the only band without a clear weak point. Probably the only band in the world capable of bringing about a revolutionary change in society not only in music but also in literature, which was about to traverse the world of the 70s almost like an illusion. more
ZZ Top -El Loco
Hummm.....what a heat! more
Drone
The most useless and radically hipster genre in the history of rock. And anyone who thinks otherwise is a traitor to good music. more