c'è Banned

DeRank : 12,64
DeAge™ : 7209 days • Here since 14 september 2006
The Rolling Stones Let It Bleed
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yet I don’t understand, there was an editorial that referred to the “soul peeper,” to emotion more than technical reviews, and yet this review (wonderful) ends up in literary cases, while the duplicates and super duplicates of fake and super fake end up on the homepage.
Black Sabbath Master Of Reality
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the heaviest album by the Sabbath, hard to imagine the impact it had in 1971 (not 1970 as you claim). First parenthesis of the first line from 1 dry without even having to continue reading.
Black Sabbath Black Sabbath
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I prefer the second one over the first.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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My post is not meant to be derogatory towards Black Sabbath and especially towards Iommi (one of the guitarists I listen to most often). Let's say that once, when there was a need for a single, this is how it was done; even Deep Purple, when they needed a single for their "Fireball," shamelessly copied the riff from "Summertime" by Ricky Nelson for their "Black Night" --> I also quote post 19 and, in fact, I have half a review that talks precisely about this.
Black Sabbath Black Sabbath
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album with a strongly hard-rock imprint, featuring blues and jazz nuances that will start to fade away from the second album onward. In the first, the various influences are still perceivable: Black Widow, Cream, Led Zeppelin, the first album by Jethro Tull, and even some elements borrowed from Colosseum and Jimi Hendrix Experience. To date, I still prefer the first one even if perhaps this is the most beautiful.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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To tell the truth, the structure of "Moby Dick" is actually that of "Toad" by Cream, which both Zeppelin and Sabbath heavily referenced (for example, the riff of "N.I.B." closely resembles the legendary and almost proto-doom riff of "Sunshine Of Your Love"). It should be noted that "Paranoid" (the song) is a collage taken from the Zeppelins: the rhythm comes from "Communication Breakdown," and the main riff is derived from a riff in "Dazed And Confused." Even "Wicked World" (from the first album) features a guitar solo that is strongly inspired by Jimmy Page, a sort of cross between those in "Whole Lotta Love" and "Heartbreaker."
Donovan Barabajagal
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To me, "A gift from A Flower to the garden" seemed tremendously outdated, too trendy back in 1967.
Donovan Barabajagal
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very interesting album, although I prefer "Hurdy Gurdy Man" (the title track is beautiful, later covered by the Butthole Surfers), and especially "Sunshine Superman," his masterpiece album (with the stunning "Season Of The Witch"). I agree with your last sentence. He always surrounded himself with great musicians; if I'm not mistaken, John Paul Jones played bass on Hurdy Gurdy Man, and Hendrix (his great friend) was supposed to play guitar, then Jimmy Page, but in the end, it seems Alan Parker played on it.
Unwound Fake Train
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Damn, I didn't think it would be so predictable and obvious. There's no longer the same kind of crazy people as before.
Unwound Fake Train
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since I won the bet? The left ball is safe