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@reverse also check out the Scott Genius MC, they work wonders for the trail.
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Well, Don, at the Dolomiti Superbike, there was plenty to celebrate the climbing skills, with the ascent to Prato Piazza, that of Croda Rossa, and Piazza San Silvestro. In the end, it was over 3700 meters of elevation gain!!! Thank goodness I don't have the belly that the frustrated colossal youth was talking about. But can you compare the descent at full throttle over the rocks from the Harnould Baranci refuge with the Austrians on our heels to the smooth curves painted on the easy asphalt?
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follow your instinct and don't give a darn about what others might think; it's not the name or the nickname that matters but what's written in a review or a comment.
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Good job reverse, you got it all :) If you’re not racing like I stubbornly do, a hardtail is pointless; go for a full suspension 120+120mm or a 130+130 with possibly lockable travel or a stable platform, and you’ll see that you’ll have fun.
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Thanks for the link, bubi. Of course, defining stuff like "Tobacco Road" as family psychedelic with the dopey host who runs off, comes back with earplugs in, and wants the Magoos to explain to him what that music represents...
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Of course it makes sense, it wouldn't be a problem (but in my opinion, aside from personal tastes, giving a three to this album makes less sense), yet I still don't understand the phrase "an excellent garage blues band more rooted in the past than projected into the future."
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blackdog may not have noticed that at least the top ten reviews have disappeared from the "most liked" list, and it seems that none of the interested parties have taken action to protest, even though they have nothing to do with this dispute. What can you do, long live the editorial line :)
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So, do you think the Sonics were projecting into the future while the Blues Magoos were stuck in the past? It was a year of great movements: Seeds, Shadow of Knight, Electric Prunes. For me, the Blues Magoos are the most technical and innovative of the bunch; just take their next album, Electric Comic Book, a record rich in ideas, with the organ that would be picked up by the early Doors and guitars intertwining perfectly. What more could they have done if they broke up a few years later? For me, this is an album that ranks among the top hundred of the '60s, not just a three.
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Seen on Debaser during this dark period, it's clear that Giona is one of those who has never read the Gospel (Matthew 7:6)... "Team Spirit," which was co-written with Phil Manzanera, is now found under the new title "Frontera" on his magnificent debut solo album.
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No, but I would like this to be explained "an excellent garage blues group more anchored in the past than projected into the future." In short, in 1966, the Blue Magoog are among the first to give an acid imprint and scratch the notes compared to the beat sound, to use distortion at full blast, to use the term psychedelic, and in the end today gluca1985 says that they are a group more anchored in the past than in the future. But anchored to the past and future in relation to which year, 1966 or 1985? They are not the Miracle Workers or the Tell Tale Hearts, are they?