<3 more
Great until the abandonment of "his majesty" Cavalera, with his burps and his moves, then they obviously lost their way. more
He has written great pieces like "your song" and "rocket man," but as a person, he has always been quite boastful, obsessed with crude and embarrassing sexual references, and from the '80s onward, completely sold out to a very kitschy chart pop ("sacrifice" is just ridiculous... him with platinum blonde hair moving like an obese eel, well... whatever). Today, he is a wealthy, arrogant, snobbish, and a bit gay. more
The one Bill Hicks hated to death, the one who started a campaign against Gaddafi, the one who called the USSR the "evil empire," the one who was nearly assassinated, who had cancer multiple times but survived anyway, a political figure often regarded as one of America's greatest statesmen, an emblematic representation of the most rampant U.S. imperialism and the militarism that emanated from him to later merge into the various Bush-Clinton mandates in a desert of wars. Coincidentally, one of the architects of the policy that "de facto" brought down Soviet Russia (at the time he skillfully did it by "softening" the only vaguely "pacifist" and non-reactionary Soviet leader, who paid the price for these characteristics). more
Maybe it's me who doesn't understand, but I don't see what Yoko has to do with the music. P.S.: it's not her fault that the Beatles split up. more
I found it truly beautiful; it’s the perfect conclusion of their journey, a instrumental, continuous, and emotional stream of consciousness that represents well what has always been their deepest essence: the journey in music, in whatever way it is conceived. Notably, it opens and closes in the same way as their four pearls from the '70s, almost further highlighting the idea of the "Infinite River" at the core of the album (and their music in general). And then, just like with the previous "The Division Bell", I feel particularly attached to this, since these are the only two albums of theirs that I have experienced live, due to my age. more
I met Armand two years ago at an exhibition in Venice, and he inspired immediate and mutual sympathy. Of Peruvian origin but a lifelong resident of Germany, Armand is an eclectic artist, and the techniques he uses to express himself lead him towards a fusion that I might call "spatial" between European and American painting. What struck me immediately about the various installations showcased at the exhibition were his monochromatic paintings featuring the most absent color that exists: black. In art, this color is a non-color because even shadows are colored—just think of our reflection on a floor or in a mirror—and its opposite, white, is nothing more than the sum of colors. In painting techniques, white and black are also referred to as "dead colors" because their cold tone generally serves as a base in artistic preparation. Using black uniformly on the canvas denotes courage, or the search for a particular expressive language. The black canvases displayed in Venice, I have called Armand's Black Stars. more
Great emo-alternative album. The cover caught my attention, but I was quite skeptical about the content. Instead, I like it, and quite a lot too... more
"Johnny Il Bello" and "The Wrestler" are enough for me. An surprisingly versatile actor who, even in the most mediocre films, manages to hold his own. more
"The Oasis have been the soundtrack of my life for the last twenty years on this beautiful planet. I have stories and images in my head that accompany everything, from the first time I heard a particular song and read certain articles, to when I heard about their antics and celebrations." (Lars Ulrich) more
Uphill road for Vasco Q8! more
here inside ready to smear it: kyot! more
"quock!'' vattelapesca more
A true living monument of Italian horror, having produced quite a few mediocre films after Phenomena (perhaps the last noteworthy work among his must-see films, aside from the pheega etc.). A daughter who has taken a lot from her father, especially on a psychological level (fortunately not aesthetically). more
It can be defined as a cantantróia. more
it disconnects the 3òzzo for the first albums of the '10 more
Four of help more
incomparable: tant'è tzum! more
cute but not too much, sharp but not too much, catchy but not too much, and just smart! more
Hey big panther from Goro, roar* and live in harmony [*licence poetique] more