Pink Floyd -Meddle
melody and experimentation in a perfect combination. And then there's echoes, and that's enough for the highest rating. more
John Lennon
Virtually happy birthday, JOHN more
The Alan Parsons Project -Eye In The Sky
High-class music and some exquisite songs. Certain instrumentals are beautiful too! more
AC/DC
They just make noise. Angus is eaten in Churrascaria. more
Philip K. Dick
- Do you believe in God?
- I believe in Dick. more
Litfiba -Terremoto
The change of course is cemented in this hugely successful album. Guitar and vocals take the spotlight, with "easy" yet energetic songs. From here on out, the end. more
Pink Floyd -Obscured By Clouds
between Meddle and Dark Side of the Moon, a transitional album but with certain little ideas that will later emerge in the next big record more
John Martyn -Sunday's Child
Great music, in the serenity of its finest days, John gifts us his crystal-clear inspiration; listening to him is like quenching your thirst with pure spring water! John Martyn's work is an opportunity for harmonization with the universe! Not just the musical one... more
Joel & Ethan Coen -Fargo
No is the first word you've said in four hours. It's a, it's a flood of words pouring out! A volcano erupting! Damn it, can you just be quiet for a bit, huh! more
Giorgio Gaber -I borghesi
Seeing so far back in 1971 is not something everyone can do. more
Nothing But Thieves -Broken Machine
Great rock album in my opinion. more
Steven Wilson -To the Bone
the usual Wilson, yet another masterpiece! more
Skiantos -Pesissimo!
pre-crisis album of the band, the lifeblood is running low. more
Francesco Guccini -Fra la via Emilia e il West
The atmosphere created at Guccini's concerts is, I believe, hard to replicate on record, even though we're not far from it here. more
Neil Young -After The Gold Rush
A record of moving beauty. Incredibly simple, with tracks of absolute immediacy yet most of the time perfect, featuring Nello reaching some of the highest peaks of melodic inspiration in his glorious career. The crystalline and pure melodies of "After the Gold Rush" culminate in three masterpieces like the title track, "Birds," and "Don't Let it Bring You Down." Yet, even in such an album, nothing matches the power and beauty of the furious electric anathema of "Southern Man," where Young's anger, more than from the lyrics themselves, pours out through the knife-like strokes of the electric guitar, played in his uniquely recognizable style from the very first moment. An album that is a timeless masterpiece. more
Voivod -Nothingface
A fresco as brainy as it is poetic, poised between progressive metal and thrash metal, just as had been partially foreshadowed in its predecessors ("Killing Technology" and "Dimension Hatross"). The listener finds themselves in a mind-bending world and risks getting lost in this excessive genius.
One of the best albums in history. Thank you, Voivod. more
Opeth -Still Life
Most likely their creative peak, in which their most romantic and passionate side shines through. more
Godflesh -Streetcleaner
Looking for the ideological apocalypse? Here it is before your eyes. Simply one of the top five metal albums (in my humble opinion) ever conceived. more
Atheist -Unquestionable Presence
How can one define one of the most important albums of my life? Easy.
Like the pinnacle of all death metal, where the flair, stylistic elegance, compositional skills, and jazz influences of Atheist finally reach a universal dimension, becoming the definitive death metal album, encapsulated in eight tracks, totaling 32 minutes, with a highly complex and intricate structure. The ultimate masterpiece of the genre. more