rive

DeRank : 0,00
DeAge™ : 7152 days • Here since 9 november 2006
Edoardo Bennato È goal!
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Here: I believe that to fully appreciate Bennato as you call him "post Ssc", he should be seen live "post Ssc"... okay, it may lack originality, but the ideas, the energy, and the pure irony have never been lacking (except perhaps in the early 90s). Then excuse me, are you really sure that maintaining the same style for 30 years would have produced so many other beautiful songs? If he has changed, perhaps the first to doubt it was actually him.
Edoardo Bennato È goal!
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Of course you guys are obsessed with this Bennato post “Sono solo c.”! The singer-songwriter version is not the one from “Sembra ieri,” in fact it's very different. But it's also different from the original. Anyway, I don’t know what to tell you: I really enjoy listening to this album. It's a goal! And “Nisida” for me are two gems. Have you ever been to one of his concerts?
Kiss Animalize
Kiss Animalize
3 jan 07
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Heaven's on fire is majestic.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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I don’t know who said that the first Sabbath isn’t metal. I don’t know; of the first album, I only know NIB, which seems absolutely metal to me. If the drums show it only in a few tracks, the bass is there to do the rest.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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The link doesn't work for me. Maybe try again. What Axlspark says is totally shareable: they are different footprints. Anyway, for me the WARNING signs of metal that you mention are Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin. This is demonstrated by the fact that metal bands like Iron Maiden took a lot from Deep Purple and nothing from Black Sabbath.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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sorry for the duplicate. anyway, for me the biggest difference between hard rock and heavy metal, which I still consider two similar genres, lies in the use of the drums. In hard rock, it’s simple support and rhythm, while in heavy metal, it’s an obsessive, relentless, and pounding figure. Just like in Iron Man or Never Say Die.
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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To tell the truth, it’s the fashion of the last 10 years that seems to odiously assign the name metal to every new genre paired with some other strange nickname(s). Oh my, where have we ended up?
Black Sabbath Paranoid
Voto:
To tell the truth, it’s the fashion of the last 10 years that seems to odiously assign the name metal to every new genre paired with some other strange nickname(s). Oh my, where have we ended up?
Black Sabbath Paranoid
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I don't know who this Robert Johnson is, but I think it's better to let it go. Thetrooper, dear Axlspark, is a reviewer, as his nickname suggests, a devoted fan of Iron Maiden. Well, reading his reviews, it's clear that he believes they invented all of metal, that they are the greatest and the best (indeed, according to him, the only true representatives of real metal) and that everyone else just copied, derived, and created fake metal that can't even be called metal. So: there it is, having denied Black Sabbath the invention of metal, he seemed like a Thetrooper 2 to me. But please, maybe I'm wrong!
Black Sabbath Paranoid
Voto:
Metal was born here, with this album. Axlspark is absolutely right. In the '70s, Black Sabbath stood out clearly from Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, who, in the same year with the albums Led Zeppelin II and In Rock, invented hard rock. Take that, those who say that metal is just a derivative of the latter. There will surely be one of those types like the reviewer thetrooper, who have their own legendary band to whom they attribute the invention of everything, while the others are just losers. Let's try to give Caesar what is Caesar's.