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If this site didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent it.
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...damn, I just realized I made a mess...
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It's unpleasant to nitpick the most famous album in rock history, yet "Rock'n Roll," which the reviewer claims was written by Page during the recordings, is dangerously close to "Keep a Knocking" by Little Richard. And as for "Black Dog," you might want to give a listen to "Young Man Blues" by The Who. Should we remain silent about the guitar arpeggio of "Stairway to Heaven" that is strikingly similar to "Taurus" by Spirit, with whom Led Zeppelin toured in the USA? Open your eyes and your mind, boys; sometimes everyday injustices are reflected in music too...
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depressed and intimate ...because it's just like the album! Their version of Teardrop could fit on Harvest by Neil Young...
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Guys, this isn't right. You're saying what I think too, and you don't even realize it... I still have my nice vinyl of "storia di un minuto" here, and I assure you that I played it to death when I was a kid. I contest the fact that a live performance from 2000 of a band that's dead and buried is pompously presented as a fantastic experience for a young person, and this means deciding what is best or what is right for the poor young person.
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But how trivial, dear know-it-all; it's trivial to tell the young people that listening to these guys doing the same things again, at a technically higher level, in a now worn-out atmosphere is instead a fantastic experience. And it's trivial to say that the progressive music of the 2000s is one of the highest expressions of music. I would like to ask the reviewer if he has ever listened to Astral Navigations or Twenty Sixsty Six And Then in the mid-seventies... And I don't agree with the "fujetevenne" of Eduardo's memory launched by Alessio Iride either; otherwise, in the four chats we have about music with the "young people," we would still be talking about Hans's carriage instead of the clarinets used by Picciotto and companions in Red Medicine.
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Well guys, today is all very sad. Back in my day (yeah... back in the day), you'd walk down the street and from one window you'd hear Hendrix blaring at full volume, from another there was Mike Shrieve of Santana deep into a drum solo, and from a balcony three meters away the riff of "Smoke on the Water" would rattle the windows... and we weren’t even rich; we would listen to and lend each other those LPs until they wore out. Today, I see so many cool metalheads putting in their earbuds and listening to grind, doom, and thrash at a few milliwatts of power, what a shame. Even today I put on the red album by Grand Funk, and Mel Shacher's bass through the JBL makes all the glassware in the house tremble. And I feel great.
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It's quite a shame that Frank Zappa isn't part of the musical culture for most young people today, not these four clueless guys abandoned even by Mauro Pagani...
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Good job Tobby, the downloaded MP3 listened to on the iPod is the same as the original record played on a serious sound system, just as it’s the same thing to screw Pamela Anderson or her inflatable doll, because if you’re horny, you’ll come anyway...
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Honestly, I still don't know if Poletti is playing us or if he really is...