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DeRank : 0,29
DeAge™ : 7073 days • Here since 27 january 2007
The Beatles Abbey Road
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I can't believe it... I think you really asked the mosquitoes if they know the crosswalks of this track.
The Beatles Live at BBC
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Good Led Zeppelin.. no one has ever abused plagiarism as much as Plant and company..
Pablo Picasso Guernica
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"it is not your work"..Hitler, a mediocre painter who hated the degenerate art of painters like Picasso, ended up being the author of one of the greatest masterpieces of modern art, according to the master..what a joke.
Pablo Picasso Guernica
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a large canvas
Paul McCartney Ram
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It's true London, both lost their mother, but John didn't even have his father close by when he started to relate to Julia, an car hit her and killed her, and he, as we know, left us early, shot down by bullets. In short, apart from about a decade spent playing with the Beatles, not always understood, and another decade with Yoko, not always sure of being loved, we can say that John, at least in terms of misfortune, beats Paul... and quite badly. Maybe that's why I have a lot of affection for him, but perhaps it's because despite everything, he still left us some beautiful songs to listen to forever.
The Beatles Abbey Road
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you stopped at 19 lengths and that's fine.. just don't make any more efforts though.
Paul McCartney Ram
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polirock@, I also prefer John. The character lines of the two subjects have necessarily influenced their work. Paul, decidedly positive, wrote to please everyone: record labels, himself, adults, the elderly, and children; John, on the other hand, almost always wrote about his personal struggles or his mental journeys. John, as everyone knows, had problems related to an unresolved pain of abandonment by his parents. I don't know if it's a blessing, but usually, depressed artists are the most genius.
Paul McCartney Ram
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In fact, Paul's solo career had a decidedly uphill start, while Harrison and Lennon hit the ground running; he felt the absence of the Beatles brand heavily on his shoulders. However, history has shown us that Paul just needed to recover from the blow. In fact, he had abilities that were more pronounced than the other two when it came to handling (on his own) the same live concerts they used to do together. This, in my opinion, was his winning card. A multi-instrumentalist, rock "for everyone," extroverted and confident in his vocal abilities, exuberant and positive enough to deliver the emotions of the Fab Four from the old days to millions of fans who were waiting for just that.
The Beatles Live at BBC
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Glenn Branca, Throbbing Gristle, Schönberg, Etron Fou Leloublan, I really have a terrifying musical ignorance... and not just that. Listening to Penny Lane around here really makes you look like a clumsy fool...
The Beatles Live at BBC
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Ummagumma and the White Album?? With the White Album, the Beatles freed listeners from the tyranny of genre; there was everything, heterogeneous like no other album, eclecticism and contamination everywhere. They were at their peak; anyone who tried to replicate what the Beatles were in '68 hit a wall.