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Right review dream, for a film that draws too much from the recent past (and I'm sorry you didn't mention Allucinazione perversa). In fact, this scheme seems quite exploited with other artistic results from Polanski's domestic/workplace decay and from Cronenberg's bodily/mental mutation. The same solution of rendering everything in a bruised grayish tone pierced only by colors during the love encounters (?) with the prostitute feels overdone. Nonetheless, there remains a good narrative tension and a beautiful performance by Bale that I haven't seen replicated elsewhere. Anyway, something more than three.
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Ron "Rock Action" Asheton's involvement with New Order alongside Dennis Thompson from the MC5 is noteworthy, but unfortunately, they too never released an official album and the recordings in "Declaration of War" are pitiful. Additionally, having two singers in the lineup was a bit too heavy...
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@antipirla what can we do, it's always the same story here, I quote you: it's a site where "THERE'S A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO ACT LIKE THEY'RE BETTER THAN A TUG OF WAR, REVIEWING INTERESTING, APPRECIATED, HIGH-QUALITY DISCS, MASTERPIECES... THEY MAKE A GREAT SHOW OF BEING CONNOISSEURS AND FINE LISTENERS".
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Mr. Stuart Goddard is a clown not to be imitated, from the Bromley Contingent and the early live acts dressed in black tights who invited people on stage to beat him, ended up dressed as a pirate in the age of the privateers. I wouldn't give him a penny, his best tracks that I used to listen to back then are Zerox, Plastic Surgery, Young Parisians, Deutscher Girls, some even made it onto the soundtrack of Derek Jarman’s film Jubilee. The Dirk he refers to in "Dirk wears white sox" is the great actor Dirk Bogarde. A character best avoided in the musical landscape.
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the review is good but it doesn't specify that in this album the songs are co-written by Berlusconi and Loriana Lana, the album is also good but I preferred the previous one "Meglio 'na canzone" where Silvio's lyrics surpass those written by Pete Sinfield for King Crimson
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Master Tollani, I recommend you buy some additional fans, because a surprise is coming for our friend N.I.B.II.O (who hasn’t commented here, though...) for now, just the acronym U.C.P. should be enough; I’m sure he’ll understand...
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@peggiopunx just so you know, if you find something from the pre-Asheton period, I warn you it's a completely different genre, a kind of ill-digested avant-garde experimentalism. The legend is THIS ONE.
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I see you're listening to the Hoodoo Gurus, here we go: Dave Faulkner's band could have been a great mainstream Australian group!!! I can't understand how these guys with their amazing "catchy" songs didn't make billions!
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Guys, I can understand your tight stance, but I insist on the five stars. Listen to it again because there are seven SEMINAL gems, plus the Sonic Youth reference that immediately stands out to the connoisseur, as Aje confirms. In "Meet the Creeper," I hear John Doe and Exene Cervenka, and I have the feeling that Black Francis passed through here too. Even in "Nobody Knows," I hear the very early Patti Smith. Anyway, for those who like the genre and have never heard them, my advice is to get them, because plenty of surprises await you.
801 Live
26 nov 07
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What memories, guys... but which prog classic? Here you have everything and its opposite. "Thir uncle" is undefinable, somewhere between punk and dark, and in fact the Bauhaus have done it in every way possible. "Baby's on fire," do you remember it from the live performance with Kevin Ayers, John Cale, and Nico? This album is ART.