Sepultura -Roots
Just to be clear. When it was released, Tutto Musica talked about it too. more
Sepultura -Chaos A.D.
Once innovative, now fallen into oblivion. more
Soundgarden -Down On The Upside
Described by others as "a super heavy trip." more
Soundgarden -Superunknown
If it weren't for Soundgarden, Alice in Chains would have kept wearing makeup. more
Air -Talkie Walkie
I'm not saying it's a masterpiece, but it is. more
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble -Texas Flood
It starts from the blues and takes it all the way... I don't know. Anyway, great album. more
Miles Davis -Kind of Blue
The most famous record in the history of Jazz. In one word: elegant. more
Queen -A Day At The Races
After the public's consent, a second attempt. more
Queen -A Night At The Opera
The Queen when they became "the Queen." more
Joe Satriani -Time Machine
The importance is quickly explained: the beautiful album of unreleased tracks, plus the live album that is a summary of the previous episodes. more
Steve Vai -Fire Garden
An unexpectedly melodic guitar virtuosity. more
Yngwie J. Malmsteen -Odyssey
In the eighties, mixing classical scales and electric guitar was definitely a novelty. Although now it seems like a cheesy idea. This is perhaps their second best after Trilogy. The rest can be overlooked. more
Yngwie Malmsteen -Trilogy
In the eighties, mixing classical scales and electric guitar was undoubtedly a novelty. Even though it may seem like a tacky idea now. This is perhaps its best, alongside Odyssey. Everything else can be overlooked. more
CHILDREN OF BODOM -HATE CREW DEATHROOL
As someone once said, Alexi Laiho is an Yngwie Malmsteen on amphetamines. more
Alice In Chains -Alice In Chains
To be made of heroin, to be more dead than alive, and to make a record. more
Alice In Chains -Dirt
Falling low and telling it... more
Guru -Jazzmatazz, Volume 1
"Peace y'all, welcome to Jazzmatazz, an experimental fusion of Hip Hop and Jazz..." more
Daft Punk -Discovery
Their "commercial" album. more
Guru -Jazzmatazz, Volume 2: The New Reality
The second chapter can be described as ambitious in some way and adds complexity. While remaining more anchored to hip hop than to jazz. more