Stanlio

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  • Here since 13 november 2013
The Beatles: Revolver
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
For the first time, the discography of the Liverpool group features elements of psychedelic rock that would later become predominant, said studio engineer Geoff Emerick: “From the day it was released, Revolver changed the way records were made for everyone; no one had ever heard anything like it…”

The truly lysergic tracks that make "Revolver" a genuine prototype of psychedelic rock come from Lennon:
- I'm Only Sleeping - with guitar tapes recorded backward;
- She Said She Said - inspired by an LSD trip;
- Doctor Robert - which speaks of a "lysergic doctor"; and above all - Tomorrow Never Knows - the quintessential psychedelic piece, inspired by the Tibetan Book of the Dead, the song is based on a single chord of C Major. (freely quoted from wiki)
  • madcat
    11 sep 17
    In my opinion, small lysergic elements were already present in Rubber Soul (Norwegian Wood, Nowhere Man, Girl, If I Needed Someone, not to mention the cover), not to mention that Rubber Soul was their first album conceived as a single work rather than a collection of individual tracks.
The Beatles: Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Rolling Stone magazine ranked it as the number one on the list of the 500 greatest albums.
  • Stanlio
    11 sep 17
    Cover characters and objects:
    Starting from the top row, from left, we have: Sri Yukteswar (guru), Aleister Crowley (occultist), Mae West (actress), Lenny Bruce (comedian), Karlheinz Stockhausen (avant-garde composer), W.C. Fields (comedian), Carl Gustav Jung (psychiatrist), Edgar Allan Poe (writer), Fred Astaire (dancer and actor), Richard Merkin (American contemporary painter), a "Varga Girl" (illustration by Alberto Vargas), Huntz Hall (actor), Simon Rodia (creator of the Watts Towers), and Bob Dylan (musician). The empty space between the "Varga Girl" and Hall was originally occupied by Leo Gorcey, who was later removed for asking for a monetary payment.

    Reconstruction of the cover at the Beatles Museum, Liverpool:
    In the second row, we find: Aubrey Beardsley (illustrator and 19th-century dandy), Sir Robert Peel (politician), Aldous Huxley (writer), Dylan Thomas (poet), Terry Southern (writer), Dion DiMucci (singer), Tony Curtis (actor), Wallace Berman (artist), Tommy Handley (comedian), Marilyn Monroe (actress), William Burroughs (writer), Sri Mahavatar Babaji (guru), Stan Laurel (comedian), Richard Lindner (artist), Oliver Hardy (comedian), Karl Marx (political philosopher), Herbert George Wells (writer), Sri Paramahansa Yogananda (guru), Sigmund Freud (psychoanalyst), and the profile of an anonymous person.

    In the third row: former Beatle Stuart Sutcliffe, another anonymous person, Max Miller (comedian), the Petty Girl (by artist George Petty), Marlon Brando (actor), Tom Mix (actor), Oscar Wilde (writer), Tyrone Power (actor), Larry Bell (artist), David Livingstone (explorer), Johnny Weissmuller (actor), Stephen Crane (writer), James Dean (actor), Issy Bonn (comedian), George Bernard Shaw (writer), Horace Clifford Westermann (sculptor), Albert Stubbins (Liverpool footballer), Sri Lahiri Mahasaya (guru), Lewis Carroll (writer), Lawrence of Arabia.

    Finally, in the front row: the wax statue of Sonny Liston (boxer), another Petty Girl, the wax statues of George Harrison and John Lennon, Shirley Temple (actress), the wax statues of Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney, Albert Einstein (scientist), the four Beatles, Bobby Breen (singer), Marlene Dietrich (actress), an American soldier, Diana Dors (actress), Shirley Temple (for the second time).
    Above Dors's head, the face of Gandhi was originally present but was excluded at the behest of Sir Joseph Lockwood, EMI executive, concerned about potential negative repercussions in the Indian market.

    Several characters that had initially been chosen did not appear in the final collage. Among them, Brigitte Bardot, René Magritte, Alfred Jarry, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jesus Christ, and Adolf Hitler, the last two omitted for fear of causing controversy.
  • DanyMorrison
    24 jun 18
    Anyway, I would have placed Rubber Soul in first place. Sgt. Pepper in third.
The Beatles: The Beatles
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Known by most as the "White Album."
The Beatles had just returned from their trip to India and the experience of transcendental meditation at the Rishikesh retreat, under the guidance of guru Maharishi.
The ashram in Rishikesh was crucial for the compositional and instrumental growth of the four musicians: the serenity and free time allowed them spaces for creativity and moments to compose new songs, while the absence of electricity forced them to use acoustic guitars, refining their instrumental skills and learning finger-picking technique from Donovan (another disciple of Maharishi) which would be used in more than one track of the album, played a fundamental role in the creation of the record. (source: wiki)
The Beatles: 1962-1966
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Better known as The Red Album, the double album is a collection of songs released during the period from 1962 to 1966.
  • Stanlio
    11 sep 17
    Disc 1 Side A (October 1962 - May 1964):
    Love Me Do – 2:23
    Please Please Me – 2:03
    From Me to You – 1:57
    She Loves You – 2:22
    I Want to Hold Your Hand – 2:26
    All My Loving – 2:08
    Can't Buy Me Love – 2:13

    Disc 1 Side B (June 1964 - August 1965):
    A Hard Day's Night – 2:34
    And I Love Her – 2:31
    Eight Days a Week – 2:45
    I Feel Fine – 2:19
    Ticket to Ride – 3:10
    Yesterday – 2:05

    Disc 2 Side A (August 1965 - December 1965):
    Help! – 2:19, - 2:48 (US), (the American version contains the intro of the James Bond soundtrack)
    You've Got to Hide Your Love Away – 2:11
    We Can Work It Out – 2:16
    Day Tripper – 2:49
    Drive My Car – 2:27
    Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown) – 2:05

    Disc 2 Side B (December 1965 - August 1966):
    Nowhere Man – 2:44
    Michelle – 2:42
    In My Life – 2:27
    Girl – 2:31
    Paperback Writer – 2:31
    Eleanor Rigby – 2:08
    Yellow Submarine – 2:37
The Beatles: 1967-1970
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Better known as The Blue Album, it is a collection of songs released between 1967 and 1970.
  • Stanlio
    11 sep 17
    All tracks were written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, except where noted.

    Disc 1 Side A (February 1967 - September 1967):
    Strawberry Fields Forever – 4:10
    Penny Lane – 3:03
    Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band – 2:02
    With a Little Help from My Friends – 2:44
    Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds – 3:28
    A Day in the Life – 5:33
    All You Need Is Love – 3:48

    Disc 1 Side B (October 1967 - October 1968):
    I Am the Walrus – 4:37
    Hello Goodbye – 3:31
    The Fool on the Hill – 3:00
    Magical Mystery Tour – 2:51
    Lady Madonna – 2:17
    Hey Jude – 7:08
    Revolution – 3:24

    Disc 2 Side A (November 1968 - August 1969):
    Back in the U.S.S.R. – 2:43
    While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Harrison) – 4:45
    Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da – 3:05
    Get Back – 3:14
    Don't Let Me Down – 3:33
    The Ballad of John and Yoko – 3:05
    Old Brown Shoe (Harrison) – 3:18

    Disc 2 Side B (September 1969 - May 1970):
    Here Comes the Sun (Harrison) – 3:05
    Come Together – 4:20
    Something (Harrison) – 3:03
    Octopus's Garden (Starkey) – 2:51
    Let It Be – 3:52 (modified from the original version of 4:01)
    Across the Universe – 3:48
    The Long and Winding Road – 3:38
The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Are You Experienced
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
US version remixed in stereo format with Hey Joe on side A.
In 1987, it was considered the fifth best album in the history of Rock.
The band in that 1967 was made up of Jimi Hendrix on guitar and vocals, Mitch Mitchell on drums, and Noel Redding on bass.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Axis: Bold as Love
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Just before the completion of the album, Hendrix forgot the master tapes of side A in a taxi, and they were never found. So a quick remix of side A had to be done, which Jimi didn't particularly like; he later stated that he wasn't very satisfied. However, the band's bassist, Noel Redding, claimed that this album was, in his opinion, the best of the three released. (uhm, musicians, go figure...)
  • hjhhjij
    7 sep 17
    Well, they have their own tastes too.
  • madcat
    7 sep 17
    Anyway, the story of the cover has always made me laugh (at least, I think it's true, the story of the American Indian/Indians).
  • madcat
    7 sep 17
    *Native Americans
  • Stanlio
    7 sep 17
    I don't know anything about it, Mady, what's the story?
  • madcat
    7 sep 17
    Basically, Hendrix asked for artwork that evoked Indians; he meant the Native Americans, but those working on the artwork thought he was referring to Indians, and thus ended up with the artwork we all know, by chance completely in line with the "spirit" of the time.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Electric Ladyland
Nastro Video I have it ★★★★★
Pirated on two tapes.
Here are the three core members of the band: Jimi Hendrix - lead guitar, rhythm, slide and acoustic, vocals, piano, keyboards, bass, percussion, kazoo
Mitch Mitchell - drums, percussion, vocals
Noel Redding - bass, guitar, vocals
are joined by Jack Casady - bass on Voodoo Chile
Steve Winwood - organ on Voodoo Chile
Larry Faucette - conga on Rainy Day, Dream Away and on Still Raining, Still Dreaming
Mike Finnigan - organ on Rainy Day, Dream Away and on Still Raining, Still Dreaming
Fred Smith - horn on Rainy Day, Dream Away and on Still Raining, Still Dreaming
Buddy Miles - drums on Rainy Day, Dream Away and on Still Raining, Still Dreaming
Chris Wood - flute on 1983... (A Merman, I Should Turn to Be)
Al Kooper - piano on Long Hot Summer Night
Mike Mandel - piano
Dave Mason - guitar, vocals
The Sweet Inspirations - vocals
  • hjhhjij
    7 sep 17
    The album that the Traffic also played on, no less.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Smash Hits
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Smash Hits was the first compilation of the hits by the British/American band.
The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Electric Ladyland
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
The Neville Brothers: Yellow Moon
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
There was a time when, even in Italy, the family fairy tale of the Neville Brothers was recounted in every specialized magazine, celebrated in (almost) every record store, and disseminated in the manic and economical form of self-recorded cassettes.

It was the time of "Yellow Moon," the blessed year of 1989...

A pleasant souvenir, even though there's a bit of bitterness for what today seems like unfulfilled promises. (cit.rockol.it)
The Neville Brothers: Brother's Keeper
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Here we have a great review written by novalis for DeBaser on July 18, 2007, around noon...
The Shadows: Apache
Vinile I have it ★★★★★
"Apache" was dedicated in 1960 to the homonymous Native American tribe.

At the beginning, there's a roll similar to that of the animal skin drums of the natives, then the electric guitar kicks in, repeating the introduction notes twice, after which the others join in with a motif identical to that of the natives as they march towards war. The central notes are repeated several times, similar to the initial ones, but faster or slower at the same time. The concluding notes are the same as the introduction, but the piece ends classically with a sharp pluck of the guitar without repeating the notes for a full two times. (cit. wiki)
Tullio Avoledo: L'elenco telefonico di Atlantide
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"How all this jumble of facts, characters, mythologies, and unsettling persistences manages to blend into a captivating novel is something that evokes wonder and admiration."
(Antonio D'Orrico, Corriere della Sera)
Tullio Avoledo: Mare di Bering
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"Once you open the first page, you can't stop reading it."
(la Repubblica)

"Tullio Avoledo pins you to the wall to tell you each time the best story possible."
(La Stampa)

A near future but not too close, a world similar to ours yet different from ours, a European Union that seems like the final outcome of the worst secessionist hypotheses, a society dominated by ambitious women.
This is the scenario in which the life of twenty-five-year-old Mika Ganz unfolds, who makes ends meet by pre-packaging theses... (Einaudi)
Ultravox: Rage in Eden
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
“Rage In Eden” often takes on the density of a religious chant, stripped of arches and columns, light and incense scents.

The light that filters through is that of day, at any hour, but never with a direct beam of sunlight.

The filter is the gray color of glass.

The physical place is the cold stone of the cemetery.

The four musicians choose fierce moments to chew on despair.

Their skill is as icy as the memory of Lennon or Marilyn's death (“I Remember - Death In The Afternoon”).

And everything is systematically filtered through the cold use of keyboards and electronic percussion.

There is more meditation and less improvisation; the album's recording took three months.

Billy Currie increasingly feels his classical influences, between Tchaikovsky and Béla Bartók, and the warmth of his viola.
(cit. P. De Bernardin)
Ultravox: Quartet
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
The artistic production is curated by George Martin, former producer of the Beatles from '63 to '70.

It is certainly very difficult to stay afloat in England, where trends and rhythms follow one after another without pause.

However, "Quartet" succeeds fully, tapping into what others have overlooked: simplicity.

The lyrics of the songs and their attire have changed.

Perhaps part of the credit goes to the measured production by George Martin; the fact is that the sound has undergone a significant improvement (it must have definitely been those "visions in blue").

Ultravox shakes off the burden of age with a single gesture: "Quartet."

One last thing to note: the recording, like the album, is excellent.

It's digital.

(quote G. Jandelli)
Ultravox: Ultravox!
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
I M P E R D I B I L E

is the first album by the English group released in 1976 and features none other than Mr. Brian Eno as the producer.
Ultravox: Vienna
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
In this album, Midge Ure takes over from John Foxx, who leaves the band to pursue a solo career.
Ultravox: Lament
Nastro Audio I have it ★★★★★
Of this album, there is an excellent review written by Indio for DeBasio on July 11, 2008, around noon.
Born as six lectures of the "Charles Eliot Norton Lectures" at Harvard University, it deals with the rhetoric of narrative processes with examples drawn from Italo Calvino, Achille Campanile, Carolina Invernizio, Gustave Flaubert, Ian Fleming, Roger Schank's theories on artificial intelligence, Gérard de Nerval, the act of reading according to Wolfgang Iser, Mickey Spillane, Edgar Allan Poe, Alexandre Dumas and the Parisian topography, Alessandro Manzoni, as well as some Hollywood films, the concepts of possible worlds and open works, the false and the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and the general problem of the credibility of narrative texts and the ways and expectations with which novels are read as if they were traversing a forest ("The forest is a metaphor for the narrative text; not only for fairy tale texts but for every narrative text").
cit. wikipedia
Umberto Eco: La bustina di minerva
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
"La bustina di Minerva" is a column that began on the last page of "Espresso" in March 1985 and continued weekly until March 1998, when it became bi-weekly. The "Bustine" have been selected and collected in this book.

The topics range from reflections on the contemporary world, Italian society, the press, the fate of books in the Internet era, to some cautious predictions about the third millennium and a series of "divertimenti" or short stories.

The collection gives meaning to the column, which, as the title suggests, aimed to gather those occasional and often extravagant notes that are sometimes scribbled on the inside of those matchbook covers known as Minerva.
Umberto Eco: Sulla letteratura
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The 2002 book contains 18 essays, most of the texts were written between 1990 and 2002; with the exception of "Le sporcizie della forma," originally written in 1954, and "Il mito americano di tre generazioni antiamericane" from 1980:
1. On some functions of literature
2. Reading Paradise
3. On the style of the Manifesto
4. The mists of Valois
5. Wilde. Paradox and aphorism
6. A portrait of the artist as a bachelor
7. Between La Mancha and Babel
8. Borges and my anguish of influence
9. On Camporesi: blood body, life
10. On the symbol
11. On style
12. Les sémaphores sous la pluie
13. Le sporcizie della forma
14. Intertextual irony and levels of reading
15. Poetics and us
16. The American myth of three anti-American generations
17. The strength of the false
18. How I write
Umberto Eco: Il pendolo di Foucault
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- ... is divided into ten segments that represent the ten Sephirot. The novel is rich in esoteric references to the Kabbalah, alchemy, and conspiracy theory, so much so that literary critic and novelist Anthony Burgess suggested that an index would be useful.

- ... the narrating "I" is initially a student and then a young professional in publishing in Milan. Through a series of events, he finds in the myth of the Knights Templar his true cultural and professional raison d'être. However, from this myth branch out a series of threads that correspond to the more hidden or the more rejected parts of so-called Western civilization. Through the discovery of these threads, we meet the other characters in the novel, some good, others less so, but all interested in something. (wikipedia)
Umberto Eco: L'isola del giorno prima
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
In the summer of 1643, a young man from Piedmont finds himself shipwrecked in the southern seas on a deserted ship.
Before him lies an island he cannot reach.
Around him, an apparently welcoming environment.
Alone, on an unknown sea, Roberto de la Grive sees for the first time in his life skies, waters, birds, plants, fish, and corals that he cannot name.
He writes love letters, through which his story is hinted at: a slow and traumatic initiation into the seventeenth-century world of new science, state reason, and a cosmos in which the Earth is no longer at the center of the universe. (ibs.it)

- The entire book depicts psychological situations, philosophical theories, and worldviews in dialectical contrast, and Eco concludes that his narrative does not have a worthy ending to be told. (wikipedia)
Umberto Eco: Il Nome Della Rosa
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
- Umberto Eco, with a considerable number of essays behind him, had the idea of writing a novel in '78 when a publisher told him he wanted to curate the publication of a series of short crime novels.
- Eco claimed that if he ever wrote a crime novel, it would be a book of 500 pages featuring medieval monks as protagonists.
- What seemed like a joke took shape in the author's mind when he envisioned a poisoned monk in a library while reading.
- The novel was adapted into a film of the same name directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud in 1986, featuring Sean Connery and Christian Slater.
Üstmamò: Stard'Üst
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
Almost all the work was inspired by the comet that was visible during the making of the record.
Üstmamò: Tutto Bene
CD Audio I have it ★★★★★
For those who may not have encountered them before, it is important to highlight that, although the definition of pop combined with the use of electronics can be misleading, Ustmamò fortunately have absolutely nothing to do with various Subsonica, Monovox, etc.

The group formed by Mara Redeghieri and Luca Rossi is, in fact, endowed with great creativity and refinement, and is able to utilize electronics with immense intelligence and discretion, often leaving it merely as a backdrop to give space to the use of various instruments, from acoustic guitars and metallophones to electric guitars and even strings, while also being able to range from more typically pop sounds and rhythms to almost acoustic atmospheres, alternating complex arrangements rich in sounds with much more minimalist ones. (cit. kronic.it)
Victor Hugo: I miserabili
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
This is a historical/social novel, published in 1862 and divided into 48 books, considered one of the cornerstone novels of 19th-century Europe, it was among the most popular and widely read of its time.
Victor Hugo: L'uomo che ride
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Parts of the novel describe the opulence and parasitism of the nobility, in contrast to the poverty in which the people find themselves. In particular, Hugo emphasizes that English nobles are referred to as lords, which in the English language means not only "master" but also "Lord" in a religious sense, "God." Indeed, subjects in English are also defined as subjects, meaning "submissive," but also broadly "citizens," "people."

The protagonist is himself a nobleman, the son of a noble severely punished for being "democratic" and "republican," thus close to the suffering people. The author brings to the public's attention the struggle that actually occurred between nobles of high moral stature, who were close to the people, and conservative nobles who, during that historical period, oppressed the population to enjoy enormous privileges. (source: wiki)
Vincenzo Cerami: Un borghese piccolo piccolo
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The novel tells the story of a government clerk who is nearing retirement. A year later, the eponymous film was made, directed by Mario Monicelli, featuring Alberto Sordi as the protagonist.
Vincenzo Cerami: Ragazzo di vetro
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The glass boy is Stefano, a high school student, who the lens of Cerami halts on the threshold of adulthood. He moves amidst the quagmires of conflicting sensations that continuously explode and cancel each other out. His fear of nothingness is similar, but in the opposite direction, to that experienced by Aschenbach in "Death in Venice," the book Stefano opens like a breviary during the lazy days of a summer holiday. He is dominated by an anxiety for the absolute, a frantic need to upend and erase what is pale and mediocre.
Vincenzo Cerami: Johnny Stecchino
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
It is the novel written by Roberto Benigni and Vincenzo Cerami from the screenplay of the eponymous film, directed by Benigni, and released in theaters in 1991 just before the publication of the book.
Vincenzo Cerami: Consigli a un giovane scrittore
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Vincenzo Cerami is a storyteller, screenwriter, librettist, and playwright: who better than him to open the doors of the writer's creative workshop to readers and unveil its mechanisms, tricks, and devices?
In these pages, already a great success, the author explains the hidden laws that produce the naturalness of the narrative, the techniques for constructing convincing dialogues, and the effects that can be achieved by choosing to narrate in the first or third person, etc.
In addition to the already published chapters on how to write novels, short stories, and film scripts… (cit. ibs.it)
Vincenzo Cerami: Fantasmi
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
“It’s a book that encourages you to leaf through the pages backward rather than forward. You don’t quickly flip through the pages to find out how it ends, but revisit those you’ve just read, because there isn’t just one story but many stories… Only at the end do you discover that there is one single story, with the rhythms of a sonata in four movements.”

- Umberto Eco -
Vladimir Nabokov: La difesa di Lužin
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
The Defense of Lužin, Nabokov's first masterpiece, is the story of an irreconcilable conflict between genius and normality, will and predestination, reasonable daily existence and the laws of Fate, jealous of the prerogatives that belong to it. And it is also – as the title suggests, alluding to an imaginary move invented by the protagonist – a story about chess. (from Adelphi)
Vladimir Nabokov: Pnin
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
In the nearly empty carriage of a train speeding through the countryside sits a man with a large bald head, strong in torso but with a pair of thin little legs on which sag the loose socks of scarlet wool with lilac diamonds. The solitary passenger is none other than Professor Timofej Pavlovic Pnin, an exile in the United States and the holder of a Russian language course at Waindell University, on his way to give a lecture at the women's club in another locality of the vast American province. (from Adelphi)
Vladimir Nabokov: Re, donna, fante
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Nabokov dissects and summarizes three figures and three levels of consciousness, three stages of self-perception and perception of others: from deep and numbing discomfort to petty vulgarity with its primitive lexicon, up to a more nuanced intertwining of expectations and disappointments. (from Adelphi)
Vladimir Nabokov: Intransigenze
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
Nabokov abhorred interviews. Yet, especially when he became a celebrity, he had to endure a few. But the work of those unfortunate journalists turned into a mere pretext for a spectacular reinvention, with which he aimed above all to erase "any trace of spontaneity, any semblance of actual conversation." (from Adelphi)
Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita
Cartaceo I have it ★★★★★
...such is the habit of the foolish rule that what makes noise is inevitably devoid of lasting literary quality, so great was the ignorance of Nabokov's work at the time that only a few understood what is today an obvious truth before everyone's eyes: Lolita is not only a wonderful novel, but one of the great texts of passion that traverse our history... (cit. Adelphi)