Fabrizio De André -Anime Salve
A lyrically traditional Faber, infused with musical accuracy, as only the second part of his discography has been able to provide. The perfect blend of poetry and ethnic music, a romantic sonorous prose to exalt solitude, and all those who embody it. more
Francesco De Gregori -Terra di Nessuno
A deeply felt, burning album, you haven't heard De Gregori so exposed since the self-titled one from 1978. The best of the underrated trilogy from '85 to '89, and the one where the most brilliant gems shine: "Pilota di guerra," "Pane e castagne," "Mimi sarà," and "I matti" are stunning tracks. 4.5 tightly packed balls. more
Irvine Welsh
"Doing things my way, damn it, you should just throw all those fucking books together, make a big pile, and light a hell of a fire. Who the hell needs books? You just need a newspaper, damn it, and the television, and you already know everything you need to know. What a bunch of fucking assholes. I'll get rid of these books for them..." more
The Jimi Hendrix Experience -Axis: Bold As Love
Look, she’s passing through the clouds
With a tightrope spirit running wild
Butterflies and zebras and moonbeams and fairy tales
This has always been the world of her thoughts
Riding with the wind
When I’m sad she comes to me
To gift me a thousand smiles
It's all right, she says, it’s all right
Take From Me Everything You Want
Whatever it is, whatever it is
Fly Little Wing
Yes yes yes yes Baby more
Eric Avery -Help Wanted
A panoramic panopticon. Cold, dry morning. It's raining outside. The light is electric blue, and the windows of the building are wet. Inside, the smell of coffee, smoke, and the buzzing of digital devices. Everything sterilized, everything hypoallergenic and disinfected. Dark atmospheres and leaden skies. Glacial and isolationist electronics. When the audio ends, only the electricity of the neon lights and silence must remain. more
Martin Scorsese -L'Ultima Tentazione Di Cristo
I found it for just a few euros and I didn't hesitate. A stunning film, with Defoe and Keitel in textbook performances and the soundtrack from the most inspired Peter Gabriel ever. Scorsese rules, one of his highest achievements in the '80s. more
Bob Carpenter
One single record, the troubled journey of its creation, before a longed-for epic to deliver it to history. It has been resting for quite some time now, but its art is still here to please him and tell us of a storyteller who was second to none. Thank you, Bob. more
Il Rovescio Della Medaglia -La Bibbia
Take the hard rock/doom of the early Black Sabbath, sprinkle in some prog and psychedelic elements, and you’ll get this album! Moreover, it was recorded live! more
Adriano Pappalardo
Missed talent. He helped bring Lucio Battisti and Pasquale Panella to prominence, his greatest merit. Today he has thrown himself into trash... more
Led Zeppelin -Led Zeppelin
My favorite of the first four famous albums by the zeppelins. Above all, "You Shook Me." more
The Velvet Underground -Squeeze
Exactly what did the record label hope to achieve by producing this stuff and passing it off as Velvet Underground? And it's a waste because, for an album that shouldn't exist, it's surprisingly enjoyable at times. Simple and cuddly pop rock, but if it weren't under the VU name, it wouldn't deserve at all the spittle it receives daily. Poor Doug Yule. more
Skrillex
Tamarrazzo more
Skrillex
the new pavarotti more
Marilyn Manson
sbirulino more
Mango
disgusting homophobes more
Richard Benson
you have to be scaredddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd dddddddddddddddddddddddddddddeeeewl afika more
Richard Benson
Even the Tiber didn't want it. more
Lynyrd Skynyrd -Second Helping
One, Two Three...! This is how one of the fundamental albums in the history of Rock begins... An album I have always loved and appreciated to madness, more than "Pronounced," which was and still is superior, but this has nothing to envy to it!! more