Voto:
here is the whole movie
Voto:
Here it is, the most beautiful film about drugs "Reefer Madness" from 1936, the scene when he gets high with the first joint is legendary
Voto:
Well, I think exactly the opposite; if Tarantino hadn't done it, it would be called bullshit...
Voto:
but Christoph Waltz is not a discovery of Tarantino; he had already proven his worth in the role of the Nazi officer in a couple of Toto' films.
Voto:
a record that marked an era of political engagement (1969) which Charlie endured, relegated to the "margins" of jazz by the US recording industry despite being a leader. The pieces titled in Spanish come directly from the songs of the Spanish Civil War, rearranged by Carla Bley. The "personnel" featured on the album is magnificent; in addition to the trusty Motian on drums, I recall a stunning solo by Don Cherry and another one from Gato Barbieri on tenor sax in a couple of those tracks.
Voto:
I think the album came out in 1996; I remember buying it along with "Beautiful Freak" by the Eels. A fantastic review also for the connection to "Blood Meridian." I find them very close to the Gun Club’s second album, that country turn of JLP with Miami, especially in the slower tracks like "Mother Earth," also because of Edwards' melodramatic singing, which, however, is quite monotonous compared to Jeffrey, who was the embodiment of some tropical bird in all its darker hues.
Voto:
Put on your glasses and read again "therefore I am surprised to see an excess of approximation as if it didn't even deserve a 4... but these might be my quirks for which I ask forgiveness :)" And be a little less rigid, once I wrote "no offense" in another "I ask forgiveness" and so abandon that prim and proper rigidity! How one misses the bionic metalhead or Judge Woodcock who used to mock this uptight mentality.
Voto:
Friend, I don't want to impose any point of view; I expressed my wonder, my surprise, my disappointment at seeing a miserable three assigned to this album, which I consider superb. Has it ever happened to you? Debaser also offers this opportunity to discuss others' opinions without offending, right? You are free to give it a 1, and I am free to say it doesn’t deserve a 1. Clear?
Voto:
But I believe that the value of a record is something absolute, beyond genre or artist. This isn't about hypocrisy; here (as with Zappa in rock) most musicians are only capable of shining his shoes. It's clear that out of around ninety official records, not all deserve five stars, but at least 10% do. In my opinion, Miles Smiles is definitely among them, so I'm surprised to see it overly approximated as if it doesn't even deserve a 4... but perhaps these are just my quirks, for which I ask for forgiveness :)
Voto:
you burned the podium but it seems that the wand in your hand is still there :) for me, it’s the value of the albums that matters and not relatively to an artist’s discography, considering the garbage out there to which 5s are generously given, here I even see a 3. For me, this is the masterpiece of Miles' second acoustic quintet. According to your reasoning, since he made "Somethin’ Else," "Kind of Blue," "In a Silent Way," "Bitches Brew," "On the Corner," this one doesn’t deserve a 5...