Bill Bruford -Feels good to me
Great album, Bruford is as surprising and entertaining as always, and the guest musicians are exceptional. One could have dared a bit more, all things considered, given the jazz setting and past prog influences. Many tracks feel a bit too static.
Rating: 9 more
Sam Peckinpah
The grandfather of modern action cinema as well as the father of Walter Hill and John Woo. Epoch-making. more
Bruno Vespa
"Dear Santa Claus, I would like you to make Bruno Vespa's book hit the charts, because that way he calms down a bit and stops nagging our souls by presenting it on every show. The only thing left is to see him on the sidelines during soccer matches, or in National Geographic documentaries instead of the monitor lizards."
Luciana Littizzetto more
Buster Keaton
When it comes to comedy in pantomime, everyone thinks of Chaplin. He was neither his copy nor his shadow. And he was no less... more
Franco Battiato
From another planet and a different philosophy. An excellent singer-songwriter and a refined composer. His discography features masterpieces that do honor to Italy. more
Buckethead -Crime Slunk Scene
The manifesto of Buckethead. A carefree, captivating, and intense first part, where the irony of the acoustic sections occasionally breaks through; and a second part made up of explosive experiments on hard'n'heavy bases, where the robotic and frenzied riffs typical of the shredder return. Superb. more
Tangerine Dream -Stratosfear
The high notes of the title track smash the listener's neurons. For the rest, we are faced with the usual, inspired electronic - progressive carpet. more
Popol Vuh -In Den Gärten Pharaos
A wild, arcane, drumming beginning; and a continuation filled with sacred intensity. A journey into ancient and unspoiled peace. more
Checco Zalone
"Quo vado" has broken all box office records, and "Tolo Tolo" has repeated the success... he has discovered the formula for raking in huge profits. He's good anyway, but maybe overrated. more
Lucio Battisti
Son of the immensity more
Rob Swire
I wish I could be him, and it doesn't take a genius to understand that. more
Sergio Leone
"My favorite director, whom I have been inspired by and whom I would like to resemble, is Sergio Leone. I consider myself quite good; I know I can improve over time and I am determined to do so, until the end of my career, which is why I avoid making a film a year. Yet, no matter how hard I try, I don't believe I will ever be able to make something as perfect as the final sequence of 'Il buono, il brutto e il cattivo.' I will strive to reach that level, even though I don't think I will ever manage it." (Quentin Tarantino) more
Bill Watterson -L'indispensabile Calvin E Hobbes
In my past summer readings, besides the strips found in the Comix diaries. The last strip is a mix of emotions, I don't know how to define it. The perfect successor to the Peanuts. more
Roberto Vecchioni -Robinson, Come Salvarsi la Vita
"And I would like to count your hair/until the last one without making a mistake/and in the end say that they are beautiful/and mix them up and start again" Thus ends this wonderful album, not his best, but wonderful. more
Infectious Grooves
Exceptional in their own right. A separate chapter for the bass. You can tell how wasted Trujillo is with Metallica by listening to the first few seconds of "Violent & Funky" or "Punk It Up". Warm, enveloping bass. Burton, damn it. more
Iron Maiden
Technically, I think I am too biased to truly judge them. Eternal legends. more