Dying Fetus
One of the greatest and most influential Brutal bands alongside Cannibal Corpse, Death, and Obituary.
Destroy them all!!! more
Emperor
Probably the greatest band to ever roam the Norwegian lands. In the Nightside Eclipse is the greatest black metal album to ever exist alongside De Mysteriis dom Sathanas. Essential. more
Frank Black
Frank Black or Black Francis; born "Charles Michael Kittridge Thompson IV." The one who, back in 1989, wrote and sang that simple song, which doesn't even reach three minutes, titled DEBASER... Magna Cum Laude... more
Mano Negra -Patchanka
Manuel "Manu" Chao made his debut with his crazy collective in 1988; a band that has made genre blending its creed. A melting pot of sounds, Latin American moods, rock, ska, reggae, irreverent punk attitude; short, fun, and socially conscious songs sung in Spanish, French, and English. The anthems are called "Mano Negra," "Indios de Barcelona," "Lonesome Bop," and especially "Mala Vida": a song that best encapsulates the barricade spirit, noisy and spirited, of the group. more
Pearl Jam
The first 2 albums are great (they also made a significant contribution to the "Temple of the Dog" project), along with the live shows of that period, etc... After Vs, it's personally hard for me to listen to one of their albums/concerts in full. I appreciate what they did during the so-called "grunge" period, but the alternative shift was never digested. It's my biggest musical disappointment. That said, I'm semantically attached to Ten (maybe my favorite album), so I have to give at least a 4... (even Vs, although it's inferior to Ten). more
Danny Boyle
For me, a great one, with a unique and grotesque style. Epoch-making "Trainspotting," sick "The Beach," excellent "28 Days Later," and I would say very beautiful "127 Hours." Everything else, aside from a little something here and there, doesn't fully convince me, but he remains a great. more
Gang Starr
Don't miss a beat. more
Dire Straits
J J Cale knows a thing or two about it. more
Pink Floyd -Animals
Truly fantastic album, great instrumental sections, beautiful, Gilmour's instrumental parts hit the heart, the tracks with titles seem to analyze society, made up of dogs, sheep, and pigs. more
Nargaroth
A tremendously controversial group, it is unique and among the best representatives of modern Black Metal. The author of masterpieces like "Black metal ist krieg" and also the creator of true dripping turds. more
Andy Rourke
Bassist often overlooked; playing in The Smiths, the huge personalities of Morrissey and Johnny Marr overshadowed him. But the band's sound owes a lot to his approach, his proverbial sense of rhythm; for this, listen to the album "Meat Is Murder." more
Linkin Park
Superultrastramegaextraiper overrated group. Although the first albums were good, for me they represented a boring teen nu metal that was, all things considered, relatively harmless. Over time, with an abundance of crappy albums plus a useless remix hit with Jay-Z, they have proven to be the plastic band they have always been. more
Creedence Clearwater Revival -Willy and the Poor Boys
Perfect album with "killer" singles like "Fortunate Son," Fogerty's hard-hitting protest anthem against the Vietnam War, "Cotton Fields," "Midnight Special"... perhaps second in significance only to its contemporary "Cosmo's Factory," released in 1970. more
Joe Bonamassa
this guy represents everything I do NOT look for in the blues. more
Rage Against the Machine
A man walks alone in the night in the city: he is sad, alone, imploring mercy for a life that offers him nothing in return. He puts the "Rage Against The Machine" album in the i-pod and it's immediately a catastrophic movie scene: the city is swallowed by a whirlwind, around him everything starts to burn, now he is ready to fight. I dare anyone to not feel alive after listening to "Bombtrack," "Killing In The Name," "Wake Up," or "People Of The Sun." Stratopheric band! more
Pere Ubu
Too overrated, but still creative within all the limitations. more
Joe Bonamassa
Certo! Inviami il testo che desideri tradurre e procederò con la traduzione. more
John Mayer
It's a shame he seemed good except for that kind of voice, which really gets on my nerves, that is so trendy these days. John Mayer - Who You Love ft. Katy Perry this made me abandon him for good.
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Taste
Fire and flames were what the Irish band Taste, led by the great Rory Gallagher, the undisputed master of the electric guitar, were all about. They lasted only a few years, just a brief period between the '60s and '70s, but they left their mark in the rock-blues scene and paved the way for the leader's illustrious career... A power trio very similar to Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience, their "Live Taste" from 1971 is truly incendiary... more
Pharrell Williams
Come on, it's just another opportunist exploiting the ignorance of the masses to make money on their backs... more