c'è Banned

DeRank : 12,64
DeAge™ : 7211 days • Here since 14 september 2006
Black Sabbath Paranoid
Voto:
I didn’t understand Drowse, I can’t compare them because the best is the first one or because the second and fourth are better? In my opinion, the best is the first one, while according to others, the best is the fourth.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
Voto:
"Solitude"? I also find "Planet Caravan" very beautiful, even though Solitude has a stunning lyric. The review, in my opinion, is not sufficient, but I won't rate it. The album deserves a 5; it has often been my favorite by Sabbath, although, like with Led Zeppelin, it's hard to choose a favorite among the first four. And, like with Led Zeppelin, I believe my favorite today is the self-titled debut.
Jim Morrison Jim Morrison
Voto:
you've spent so much time in your room that now you talk to the posters
Abba Abba
Abba Abba
28 aug 07
Voto:
But how sad is someone who goes to other reviews to promote themselves?
Ramones Ramones
Ramones Ramones
28 aug 07
Voto:
The punches in the stomach are hard to digest. And in this album, there are quite a few gut punches. Vito, enough with reviewing things that have already been reviewed; you're going overboard now.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni
Voto:
But is that the original cover? Mine is different.
The Stooges Fun House
Voto:
Johnny Ramone cites "Communication Breakdown" as an inspiration for his signature guitar playing. "The room exploded" is a quote from Jimmy Page, read somewhere in a book, though I can't recall which one now. I liked it as an image.
The Stooges Fun House
Voto:
But look, "Stroll On," I repeat, is exactly "The Train Kept A-Rollin'," also by the Yardbirds, just with a different title and lyrics due to copyright issues. "The Train Kept A-Rollin'" was already hard rock in 1965. It's no coincidence that it was the first song that the New Yardbirds lineup of Page-Plant-Bonham-Jones rehearsed. And the room exploded.
The Stooges Fun House
Voto:
Many have strayed into hard rock almost unintentionally, especially the Kinks with "You Really Got Me," but also stuff like John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton covering "What I'd Say" by Ray Charles. This is where the so-called "woman tone" originates, along with the amplification that Clapton would later use in Cream and that all guitarists after him, including Hendrix, would adopt. It's here that Page will switch to the Les Paul. In short, the germ is English and not American.
The Stooges Fun House
Voto:
Thank you. It's definitely a bootleg, because the recording is quite poor, but it's one of the most beautiful covers because it's one of the few that fully captures the spirit of Hendrix. I'll also get the version of Ballad Of Hollis Brown.