Voto:
I quote junior heavily, for a reward expect a review soon on another day ;)
Voto:
Honestly, not to be pernicious, but I wonder why this review goes on the home page while equally personal yet wonderful ones like mine on Todd Rundgren's Arena or the latest one on the Stones' Let It Bleed end up in the literary cases section. Just to understand, you know?
Voto:
However, the political drift of punk that Vortex talks about, at least in England, occurred when the new generations became skinheads because they continued to see a sort of utopia in the early punks that they no longer believed in. At least in England, punk was a truly proletarian movement beyond the money-driven intentions of a Malcolm McLaren and the trendy T-shirts from Westwood. At a certain point, these kids, scorned by the public and with no outlet for their hopes (utopias? see the end of the Anarchy Centre), responded by hardening their latent tendency toward violence, culminating in a more pronounced politicization like the OI! movement, also used as instruments by certain national socialist policies.
Voto:
...the path of truth does not go through affirmations like "the sympathy and competence of the hosts and guests."
Voto:
Already captain, he’s just taking the piss, he really deserves a five, he must be splitting his sides laughing reading comments like number 7.
Voto:
@vortex, in the case of the Anarchy Centre, the closure was due to other causes: lack of money, the chaos caused by the usual dealers and petty thieves who have little to do with the movement and that lead the police to oppose it. If you look at the cover notes on Christ the album! The Crass announce the closure of the centre and thank a bit of everyone, the bands, the fanzines, the people who had made it vibrant by contributing to the dream of peace, hoping that it can become a reality.
Voto:
The book is by Ian Glasper, "Anarcopunk"
Voto:
Honestly, I don't believe that Paolo spends his life watching those four idiots, listening to Iva Zanicchi, eating camogli at the autogrill, and listening to Memo Remigi. I hope for your sake that you're chuckling under those hawk-like mustaches while reading both the positive and negative comments on your reviews. I wanted to give a double one, but I think I'll make you laugh a little more.
Voto:
No psycho, Sagrath was the name of the band that Took put together with Larry Wallis shortly after he was ousted by Twink who formed the Pink Fairies. They recorded some demos and did one concert before falling apart when Wallis also joined the Pink Fairies. The record you’re talking about is 1977 recordings made with a new band called Steve Took's Horns.
Voto:
the most beautiful and "lyrical" text is that of "Beg your pardon" which is on Christ the album