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I completely agree with the reviewer. At the time, they were being promoted in every way possible, both audio and video; in Italy, they were already known before Back to the Future, with the best-selling album Sports, featuring that cover with the band inside the bar. And they were indeed more of a counterpart to English pub rock than stadium rock.
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dreamwarrior is surprising me; lately, he’s on a roll. Anyway, the most brilliant ribbing of the metalhead is this review by Nick, another fucking genius of the caricature. Who knows where dreamwarrior and Nick were born ;D Det Som Engang Var - Burzum - Recensione di MaledettaPrimavera
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The album was released in stores in early 1970, there was no internet and you couldn't download it before the release :-) It's worth noting that GFR was putting out an album every four months. Between 1969 and 1971, they released six albums, five studio albums and one live.
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The maruzze that I’ve been collecting for a while now recommend that at least one listen to Small Stone is worth it: The Brought Low :) Powerful rock-blues, bloodied and 100% derivative, less messy and personal than FHJ.
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"I want to live my life, something that is not possible to do in Naples," and so you are one of those who feels they have A GUN AIMED AT THEIR TEMPLE regardless of whether you are Saviano or just sitting on your couch at home...
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Grand Funk, between 1969 and 1971, released an album roughly every 4 months. This one came out (with that nice silver dollar-shaped cover that I sometimes like to sparkle between my hands) when they had already figured out how to capitalize on their golden goose. It was a bit of a disappointment for me, as I had memorized the wild tracks from great albums like the Red Album and Closer to Home. They didn’t have much variety, and repeating themselves every six months wasn’t easy; take a track like "Loneliness" with those pompous strings—it's dead boring, cheap AOR stuff, reeks of mildew. On the other hand, consider "Mean Mistreater" from Closer to Home, just to mention another "sweet" piece full of emotion and intensity: it rocks. The GFR, oozing blood and sweat, the dirty ones, peaked with the Live album in 1970. After that, they had already given their best; it became a good routine to make money, including Todd Rundgren’s production for "We're an American Band," and excluding the 76 album produced by Uncle Frankie.
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Yeah, trellheim should arrive; otherwise, we're at risk of being here until midnight, and I have things to do in half an hour :))))
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...but a review shatters and melts the blood in the veins :))))
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...freely inspired by the thoughts of Bellavista ;)
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@caught 100% alessio, in reality Christians are stoics, for paradise they accept to die, Marxists are stoics for the ideal they accept revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat, which to be honest are two great nuisances. Sfascia is stoic, to better listen to the music he buys books :)