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hahaha...great joke, Emanuele...
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@jargonking what would be the damage that punk did to progressive? I'm really curious. It seems to me that progressive has done the damage to itself.
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@just dreamwarrior...and you catch us on the fact that this fake is not stupid and anyway giving this record a 5 is the same as giving it a 1.
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this album is not like the debut mainly due to Landau’s polished production, with a producer capable of accommodating the rough and aggressive sound of the MC5 (even smoothing out the exaggerated highs a bit), the result would have been different. Just listen to "Teenage Lust" to understand that punk invented hot water. The "politicized" Dictators at least 5 years earlier.
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@ford_prefect: the story is 100% true.
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@slim, I think this little prick granpaul, who would be the one who has the handle of Jimi Hendrix's guitar stuck up his ass, has confused it with the group of Kewin Ayers, where Oldfield played bass. Damn it, I need to find a way to make sure the comments or reviews from certain little pricks who spoil debaser don't appear.
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It's a bit rare to see theft on the tram; usually, it happens along Via Roma because escaping on a scooter from the tram is quite difficult. It’s been years since pickpocketing has been happening on the R2 line between Piazza Garibaldi and Piazza Trieste e Trento, which is much more crowded than the tram. The reviews need to be precise.
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Damn... Silian is right, now I remember that with the new American singer they fortunately shifted towards a harder sound, and Spooky Two is a great album. Let's skip the review...
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...oh my god, very famous, it was Frampton as a solo artist who made billions. The fortune of Humble Pie lasted only a couple of years, I remember another good album with a great hit, then they dissolved. I remember Marriot tried to reform them even in the eighties but died in a fire.
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Well done, young battlegods, for these resurrections that should be a bit more appreciated by the old fogies (like me) who frequent the site, rather than the usual progressive... Anyway, let’s say that there’s a great Frampton here (before becoming unbelievably wealthy with Comes Alive) in a state of grace, who, as battle rightly points out, "is doing a Santana" in "Stone Cold Fever." The Humble are very much Americanizing on this album, influenced by country and bluegrass.