Voto:
Well, I haven't listened to the album, but the review is nice, the nickname is great, I’d also ask you to get together with me... maybe you’re just messing with all of us and instead of being an elf addicted, you’re an elf toxic. :-)
Blur 13
20 feb 08
Voto:
I think we can all agree that "blur" by grantnicholas is a true masterpiece and milestone.
Voto:
Great review and great movie, the ending of the film is a true masterpiece, it gives you chills, don’t you think, Paolo?
And I totally agree, this film has NOTHING to do with certain crap that has been produced, this is a beautiful film in every sense.
Blur 13
19 feb 08
Voto:
truly beautiful album...I don’t agree on many things, first and foremost that it’s better than Think Tank, which, from my perspective, is a "lame" album precisely due to the lack of the cornerstone Coxon, even though there are several nice things. "13" is an album really packed with stuff, enough to make your head spin, beautiful beautiful beautiful.
Voto:
can't even tell the difference between velvet underground and the beatles...
Voto:
the beginning of experimentation and psychedelia in the Beatles. gustavolamazza are you out?
Voto:
...beck, pearl jam, pavement, pj harvey...how much longer do I have to go on? just sporadic cases? today, in these 2000s, there are unfortunately few ideas, moreover borrowed from previous decades, but the 90s were, I repeat, a rebirth starting from the Nirvana who inaugurated it in '91.
Voto:
I listened to some of these desert sessions, not bad, the tracks vary quite a bit from one style to another, nice review.
Voto:
But the r.e.m.? The sonic youth? The pixies? The spacemen 3? There were also bands like that around in the 80s. Then in the 90s... a true renaissance... nirvana, soundgarden, blur, my bloody valentine, radiohead, alice in chains, jeff buckley... so much great stuff. Come on, you can't spout that nonsense, the 80s weren't just that garbage. Not many realized it, though, and to say the 90s were awful... well, that's just plain ignorance.
Voto:
I'm talking about a cultural shift; historically, before Nirvana, the music of the '80s dominated, like Jackson, Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Madonna... after Nirvana, a completely different type of music thankfully took over. The fact that Nevermind dethroned Dangerous from the charts had a significant symbolic importance as well. And let's not always talk about record sales, otherwise soon you'll say that Britney Spears is a milestone in music. The Final Cut being the most important album of the '80s? You can't be serious... what nonsense.