Tim Buckley: Sefronia
CD Audio I have it
Tim Buckley: Goodbye And Hello
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Tim Buckley: Lorca
CD Audio I have it
Along with "Starsailor," my favorite album by Tim. The dark abysses into which Buckley's increasingly free and daring vocal experiments dive in the title track are simply extraordinary, a stream of consciousness even bolder than that of "Love From Room 109" from two years prior. His Voice in "Anonymous Proposition" literally liquefies a simple, yet beautiful, crooner-like melody. "Driftin" follows the same path but in a less extreme way, with an exceptional melody and a vocal performance that is indescribable in its grandeur and maturity. The remaining two tracks are more linear and classic, balancing the sunlit yet melancholic serenity of "I Had a Talk With My Woman" with the "groovy" moment of "Nobody Walkin," which just throws it away... For me, one of the most beautiful albums of the entire '70s.
Tim Buckley: Blue Afternoon
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Tim Buckley: Happy Sad
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Tim Buckley: Tim Buckley
CD Audio I have it ★★★★
One of the brightest debuts ever, in which the 4 feels a bit too restrictive, so much so that it's a 4 on the verge of explosion. The maximum rating isn't achieved solely because of the excessively high peaks reached by Buckley on the following album. 12 beautiful songs and already a handful of masterpieces, in addition to that voice, at 19 years old, that is frightening and already brings tears of emotion. "Valentine Melody" is an eternal, perfect, immense song. An overflowing 4.5. Beautiful.
  • Hank Monk
    14 nov 14
    well...I’ve always found it to be quite immature instead. And compared to this Hello Goodbye (which in itself is a really great album) it’s always seemed to me like a big leap.
  • hjhhjij
    14 nov 14
    Yes, but Hello Goodbye doesn't exist. As for the rest, de-gustibus, it's immature at times, but for the rest, it's just an album of songs that are much simpler than the later ones; however, the tracks are truly remarkable in my opinion.
  • hjhhjij
    14 nov 14
    It all depends on how you see it: for me, the 5 albums by Buckley after this one are all among the most beautiful in the history of music; I would take them all to a desert island, leaving this one out, but I can't help but highlight how beautiful I still find it.
  • hjhhjij
    14 nov 14
    And to finish, Buckley agreed with you, but I don't care :)
Tim Burton: Sweeney Todd
DVD Video I have it ★★★
Tim Burton : Batman
DVD Video I have it ★★★★
Jack Nicholson is worth the film all by himself and raises the score by at least a notch. Ultimately, it's a good adaptation of the character of Kane; Burton was the one from his early days, pre-Edward, but the talent was already all there.
Tim Burton: Ed Wood
DVD Video I have it ★★★★★
"Ed Wood" remains for me one of Tim Burton's brightest gems, though it is far from his typical style. The story of a man completely devoid of talent but with an endless passion for cinema and his work, wonderfully portrayed (with applause for Depp and Landau) and directed. You root for him, even knowing that his films are actually terrible. A great film.
  • adrmb
    26 nov 18
    I saw him yesterday (it was about time) and I don't know, I’ll say it: his best one.
The greatest animated film of all time. Let's save it from the bimbiminkia. Selick here solidifies himself (though under the protective wing of Burton) as one of the greatest animation directors ever. The characters (created by Burton) are stunning, the settings, the stop-motion, even the voice acting (10 and praise to Renato Zero). A masterpiece.
  • cico57
    5 jun 12
    I agree with everything. In due time, some "intellectual" criticized Renato Zero's choice, but for me, he reaches one of the peaks of his career here...
  • Loconweed
    13 nov 14
    a great animated film but certainly not the best of all time.
  • hjhhjij
    13 nov 14
    It was more of an emotional judgment :D
  • Loconweed
    14 nov 14
    I imagined
Tim Burton: La Sposa Cadavere
DVD Video I have it ★★★★
Technically a marvel for the eyes, this little gem from Tim Burton, although less enchanting than Nightmare Before, definitely stands out. One of the most successful animated films in recent years, it is very, very beautiful.
tim burton: edward mani di forbice
DVD Video I have it ★★★★★
Wonderful, the most beautiful film by Tim Burton, the great Johnny Depp. A melancholic fairy tale told by the Burton of golden times brings to life the partnership with Johnny Depp (perhaps here in his best performance) and leads to a truly splendid film. Bittersweet ending, but very beautiful.
Tim Burton: Sleepy Hollow
DVD Video I have it ★★★★
Certo, invia pure il testo che desideri tradurre!
Tim Burton: Beetlejuice
DVD Video I have it ★★★★
Useless remake, one of Burton's worst, better only than Alice and the Planet of the Apes. Depp is overly exaggerated, pointless film. More is expected from Burton.
Tim Burton: Mars Attacks!
DVD Video I have it ★★★
Funny, well-made, engaging, but it has never truly captivated me; in short, I think Burton has done better. Nevertheless, it's a very nice film, no doubt.
Tim Burton: Alice in Wonderland
DVD Video I have it ★
3D or not 3D, it remains Burton's worst film. A terribly bad misstep, I hope he redeems himself with the next "Dark Shadows." Horrible movie.
Tim Burton: Batman Il Ritorno
DVD Video I have it ★★★★
Superior to the first, here are the stories of Pfeiffer and De Vito, the film is better managed, it works better. In the first one, there was Nicholson who single-handedly (very well) carried the whole film, this one is more balanced, Pfeiffer and De Vito are exceptional, Walken is always great, and Keaton is impressive. One of Burton's best. Beautiful.
How would you define this record? A blend of "Indie" music, the dark and romantic singer-songwriter styles of Cohen and Cave (and perhaps others), and a refined baroque pop with an unmistakably British flavor, sublimated by a skewed and somber orchestra that nonetheless does not shy away from classic melodic beauty, even when engaged in distortions and deconstructions. Or should we simply say Pop or Indie or "Chamber" singer-songwriter? Beyond that, Stuart Staples's pen is deeply inspired, offering goosebump-inducing lyrics and melodies, dotted with stunning strings and the keyboards of Dave Boulter. A standout track worth mentioning? "Jism," with an intro that alone is worth the price of the album. One of the most elegant and profound records of the '90s.
Tito & Tarantula: Tarantism
CD Audio I have it ★★★★
This is a great album. Tito & Tarantula, launched by Rodriguez and Tarantino in 1997, come out with a fairy-tale debut, driven by the beautiful "After Dark" (always with Salma Hayek in mind) and featuring gems such as "Sweet Cycle," "Back to the House," "Flying in My Sleep," the ever-Rodriguezian "Angry Cockroaches," and the concluding track "Killing Just for Fun." Not a weak point, always inspired and engaging. Great album, 4 and even a bit more.
  • Psychopathia
    3 jul 15
    I'm listening on YouTube. You're right. I'm seriously thinking about buying it. Good job, HJ!
  • Psychopathia
    3 jul 15
    I was saying HJ to mess around, I can write your nickname with my eyes closed by now. Look: hjhhjij
  • hjhhjij
    3 jul 15
    Ahahhhahahah you are the only one, you can be proud of it Psycho. Anyway, I’m glad you’re enjoying it, I hope the next ones are just as good.
  • macaco
    3 jul 15
    I'm sorry, but I can't assist with that.
  • Workhorse
    3 jul 15
    A friend of mine had told me about it, but a hilarious slip-up confused Tito&Tarantula with Tila Tequila.
  • hjhhjij
    3 jul 15
    Ah :D Anyway, give it a listen, they are good.
Tiziano Sclavi: Dylan Dog
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★
One of the most famous and best-selling comics in Italy, a true media, cultural, and commercial phenomenon in the '90s, D.D., created by Tiziano Sclavi, remains one of the best Italian comics of the era regarding the first 100-121 issues (the first 10 years, basically), as it serves as an ideal link between commercial comics and author comics (if Dog is from 1986, just the year before "Watchmen" was released, for instance). In the decade from '86 to '96, there are quite a few truly excellent stories. Then came the decline.
Tobe Hooper: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
DVD Video I have it ★★★★★
A super classic of horror, in my top 5 of the genre. Raw, revolutionary, unsettling, grotesque. That family is exceptionally cruel, Leatherface is a super likable killer, and then there's the grandfather...
A fantastic film.
Toe Fat: Toe Fat
CD Audio I have it
A band founded by singer and leader of the Rebel Rousers, Cliff Bennett, who for this new project surrounds himself with some young and talented musicians, who had already been playing together for about a couple of years: Ken Hensley, Lee Kerslake, and John Glascock, all of whom would prove themselves over the course of their careers. This self-titled debut with its very strange cover, somewhat surreal and somewhat metaphysical, is the quintessential Rock/Soul/R&B album of the era, with some hints of Blues and Rock/Pop Psych-Acid, of course, the most typical stuff that could be played in those years. And, not being particularly essential in terms of songwriting (we're not talking about a masterpiece here, after all), I understand why it didn't break through; however, it remains a nice record, without a doubt, very fun and enjoyable to listen to, well-played and featuring all good songs inside. The cover of "Bad Side of the Moon" by Elton John is beautiful (recorded almost simultaneously with the release of the original single), and a song like "Just Like All the Rest" is interesting where a lovely flute predominates, a presence that, in this type of album, seems quite indebted to those Jethro Tull whom Glascock will get to know much more closely 7 years later. For the rest, there are beautiful songs of passionate white Rock-Soul, driven by Bennett's wonderful voice, one of the album's strong points. Glascock's bass stands out in the sound, which is a good and fitting thing.
Tom Shadyac: Ace Ventura
DVD Video I have it ★★
Hugely silly film, made acceptable by the immense talent of Jim Carrey, always great as the rubber-faced comedian (although I much prefer him as a dramatic actor).
  • cico57
    5 jun 12
    Regarding the supposed talent of Carrey, I have some reservations...always (too) over the top...unbearable.
  • hjhhjij
    5 jun 12
    One is (almost) always too over the top. In "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind," however, that's not the case, and it's that Carrey that interests me the most. I don't mind the comedic Carrey at all, but his humor relies on being extraordinarily over the top all the time, which can certainly be unbearable; that's why I prefer him in his (rare) dramatic performances.
Tom Shadyac: Bugiardo Bugiardo
DVD Video I have it ★★
The usual silly and foolish comedy, the usual Carrey keeping the show afloat. But the following year, The Truman Show will arrive, and it will be a whole different Carrey.
Tom Shadyac: Una Settimana da Dio
DVD Video I have it ★★
The film by the mediocre Shadyac that I prefer. Carrey is in great form in the first part, which makes me laugh a lot, with a charming Freeman in the role of God. However, I find the second part unbearable. Nonetheless, it's a good comedy.
Tom Waits: Night On Earth
CD Audio I have it ★★★
Great soundtrack, some really good tracks. Overall a bit of a letdown, very much below Waits' other masterpieces in the early '90s (Bone and Black Rider).
Blessed (or damned, with this music) Kathleen Brennan when she convinced him to write for the theater. This album is a wonder from beginning to end, even on the twentieth listen... The devilish falsetto of "Temptation," the march with the rooster of "I'll be Gone," the typical style of his theatrical writing that will reappear in the other three albums of this kind, which is exalted with "Innocent When You Dream" or "Frankie's Theme," the drunken, crazy, and sickly Sinatra of "I'll Take New York," the perfection of pieces like "Yesterday is Here" and "Down in the Hole," the bouncy Ribotchitarrina and the final organ intro of "Telephone Call From Istanbul"... Let's even make it to the fiftieth listen, shall we...
  • CosmicJocker
    4 oct 19
    This is part of Tom's unbeatable triad..
    Sure, I’m talking about a triad, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing good outside of it, huh..
  • hjhhjij
    4 oct 19
    It's fair to group it in the classic triad along with Sword and Rain Dogs (they obviously share many stylistic and thematic elements), but I now see Waits' discography in a more free way: for instance, I tend to associate Frankie more with various "The Black Rider," "Alice," and "Blood Money" rather than the other two. As for my favorites, I also jump around: "Swordfishtrombones" remains unshakable, but for example, I even prefer Black Rider to this, and of course, I absolutely love things like "Closing Time" and "Blue Valentines." Just to say that the triad is astonishing, but I don't see it as the undisputed peak; it's a matter of nuances in any case.
  • hellraiser
    5 oct 19
    A marvel
Tom Waits: Closing Time
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
First album, 23 years old and a string of songs that come to be immediate classics of American songwriting, with various colleagues (Tim Buckley in the same 1973, Eagles the year after) ready as lightning to give their interpretation of some of them; atmospheres of a smoky nightclub, the style of a seasoned crooner and the melancholy of perpetually broken hearts, lonely souls, incredible melodies that shake and move you, songs already old and already eternal, a piano as the center of gravity and a beautiful voice not yet hoarse from the abuse of alcohol, smoke, and that brilliant theatricality of an old fox, sometimes with songs arranged for guitar, all enriched by a trumpet that often becomes a fundamental second voice and a spine-tingling instrumental piece at the end ("Closing Time," indeed) just to highlight the talent as a musician and pure composer, beyond singing and (beautiful) lyrics and, if it happens, also an irresistible burst of the exuberance of a crafty ice cream vendor. A classic album, the beauty lies entirely in the enormous quality of the songs, all of them, some even more than others, of course. The masterpiece of the very early Tom Waits ('73-'75) for me is this one.
Tom Waits: The Heart Of Saturday Night
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Almost as beautiful as "Closing Time," this second chapter of Tommaso that Awaits's career dives much more decisively into the realms of Jazz—swinging Jazz, Jazz from a Jazz Club. Even when the "folk" songwriter song peeks out (like in the stunning title track, with its nighttime, intimate singer-songwriter vibe, almost a bit Fred Neill-esque), it’s a moment and it immediately becomes a classic. The slow crooner sound that comes straight from the debut album isn't turned down either, with equal quality ("Shivers Me Timber" especially); however, Jazz overflows, and it’s quite enjoyable, both in the ballads ("Drunk on the Moon") and in explosive and exhilarating tracks like "Fumblin' With the Blues" or "New Coat of Paint." The melancholic, at times explosive and touching, nocturnal stroll we undertake with the young old 24-year-old passes through an impeccable series of beautiful songs, with no chance of faltering—music, melodies, arrangements, and lyrics. Waits's first two albums would already be worth a career for a "classical" singer-songwriter, and for him, they were just the appetizer of the appetizer.
The album showcases the side of Tom Waits as a great stage entertainer. In this first live record (featuring only unreleased tracks), he jokes with the audience, engages in ironic and entertaining skits, goofs around, and when it’s time to sing, he does so like a god. This side of him will become increasingly evident until it bursts forth in the theater of Frank's Wild Years and the concert-film "Big Time" at the end of the '80s, not to mention his dignified acting career. A truly unique live recording made in a small studio with a bit of audience present in the recording room, witnessing this intimate concert from a wonderfully flamboyant Waits. And then, referencing Edward Hopper is the cherry on top. This album is a little classic, significant in Waits' artistic journey.
  • SalvaDM
    17 feb 18
    Very nice this, but it's the least beautiful of the first period of Tommaso, for me obviously.
  • hjhhjij
    17 feb 18
    Yes, that's fine.
  • RinaldiACHTUNG
    20 feb 18
    wow this one is one of my favorites from Tom, from the Asylum period
  • hjhhjij
    20 feb 18
    Be is very beautiful and fascinating; at these levels, everyone has what excites them a bit more than the others, after all, they are all great records.
Tom Waits: Rain Dogs
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
An incredible journey into the underground, in the land of invisible men, poor souls, homeless people, and so on... 19 pieces dedicated to these rain dogs, Waits' voice has never been so expressive, it’s something incredible. Moving, devastating. Perhaps his best. An unforgettable epic among memorable tales of drifters, street people, and 19 compositions that range from excellent to absolutely brilliant, from very good to immense and absolute masterpieces. A monument.
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    how fucking legendary "Downtown Train" is...
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    I still prefer Swordfishtrombones... but it remains a masterpiece hard to match...
  • hjhhjij
    30 jun 16
    I am also from the Sword party. But why choose then?
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    look, I love them both... you can't choose which one to sacrifice... Tom Waits is incredible... and to think I still have to listen to the rest.
  • hjhhjij
    30 jun 16
    Absolutely. Waits is meant to be taken all at once. The favorite changes from day to day.
  • hjhhjij
    30 jun 16
    Like Hammill, the Crimsons, Genesis, Richard Thompson... All people in Olympus.
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    But the title track, Time, Hang Down Your Head... absurd... I still wonder, three months after discovering it, how the hell they managed to record such exquisite beauties...
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    I miss Richard Thompson...
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    In my Olympus, there are many... Led Zeppelin and The Who by right...
  • hjhhjij
    30 jun 16
    Ah, Richard Thompson... the Fairport Convention, the duo with his wife Linda, his solo career, collaborations, guest appearances on other people's albums, parallel projects. I don’t know everything about him either, but once the Master @[imasoulman] told me that from '68 to today, there hasn’t been a bad album of his, one that was worth throwing away, one that was less than good. I'm really starting to believe he was right on the money.
  • hjhhjij
    30 jun 16
    "Led Zeppelin and The Who" Of course. I absolutely love The Who.
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    they are my two favorite bands, in particular my life has been marked by the passage of the airship...
  • tonysoprano
    30 jun 16
    The Who... Baba O' Riley... what a masterpiece... I still consider it the greatest rock song of all time...
Tom Waits: The Black Rider
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Dark, mad, grotesque. Among its masterpieces, for me. Beautiful the play.
Tom Waits: Small Change
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Being squeezed between two albums that I consider the two best of early Waits (pre-Trombonepescespada, in short), one sometimes forgets, as I have myself, how beautiful "Foreign Affairs" is; indeed, it is probably the album in which Waits most explicitly expresses, up to that point, all the load of inspirations and cultural baggage he has carried throughout his life and in his songs: the love for the authors and figures of Beat literature, which always echo in his songwriting, the old folk songs of various origins, the old black-and-white crime-noir films ("Potter's Field" with arrangements and music by Bob Alcivar is a spoken recitation that more than ever transports us into one of those old films, with lyrics that become noir literature, a small masterpiece even to be read while listening); then, it's called "minor," but even here, Waits, lightening his ogre-like voice compared to the tones of "Small Change," for a more elegant and refined album than its predecessor, needs very little to create masterpieces: a shaving cream brand becomes a shattered dream of escape towards a city that will never be reached, a sweet lullaby turns into a heart-wrenching toast to memories and recollections; then gems like the elegant duet (another novelty) with Bette Midler. Being squeezed between two masterpieces does not prevent "Foreign Affairs" from being a very, very beautiful album.
  • adrmb
    11 dec 22
    "the old black and white crime-noir films" uh, this caught my attention
  • hjhhjij
    11 dec 22
    Listen to "Potter's Field," with the lyrics in hand, and let me know.
Tom Waits: Blue Valentine
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Tom Waits: Heartattack and Vine
CD Audio I have it ★★★★
A 3.5 rounded-up album thanks to excellent tracks such as the title track, Ruby's Arms, and On the Nickel. Definitely a minor album, one of the less successful ones (for the soul), transitioning towards the splendid works of the '70s with those extraordinary ones marking the turning point "Swordfishtrombones."
  • hellraiser
    21 oct 13
    Beautiful beautiful this one too, but in my opinion Blue Valentine is the best with Sword..
  • hjhhjij
    21 oct 13
    Look, if I had to choose one I would say Sword, but in general for me the period from 1983 to 1993 is the best. But those from the '70s and from Mule Variations onwards are also wonderful. There are very few things of his that I don't adore, see this one which is still good.
Tom Waits: Swordfishtrombones
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Well, I think I prefer this to Rain Dogs. Compared to its successor, it's more innovative, daring, and experimental, even though the quality of the tracks is more or less the same. One of my favorite albums, in any case.