Voto:
Uh ... the vote to the good rece
Voto:
I believe I'll get the whole album sight unseen. I also really enjoyed the previous one, 100th Window, despite its icy sounds. The cover really seems like a reimagining of that of UNKLE (I highly recommend a listen if you like Massive), which even featured a collaboration with Del Naja. War Stories is truly a great album, like all those by UNKLE... ueh, it's no coincidence that both Massive and UNKLE are in my de-classification, damn it!
Voto:
Here it is... this brick is the transposition in letters of what the DT represent for music if you allow me the parallel. In both cases, a void, redundant, excessive display of letters and notes good for exalting those who don’t understand a thing about literature and music hehehe... let me exaggerate a bit.
Voto:
No worries Casamorta. I believe we share the same idea of football; my idolization of Diego makes even that theft seem like a praiseworthy act. What he did on the field deeply moved me, and I think he is the only athlete I would gladly shake hands with, thanking him for what he has shown me. On the field, I would have forgiven him for anything, but know that loyalty is also an absolute value for me. I reiterate that it was the only blemish in a strictly competitive context. I absolve him, but I also understand the aversion he can provoke.
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For me, this book is an endless, verbose crazy nonsense. An empty mental wank, a detailed parallel universe good for a teenage audience. On the other hand, I can also understand how such an effort could excite a large number of readers.
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But come on, Casamorta... you've even seen him play live, I’ll grant you he was a bit of a jerk and that’s saying something (even though for me, the mano de Dios was pure genius). Can you deny that from a purely technical standpoint he was the best, or does your aversion to the character cloud your judgment so much? Because if that’s the case, then we can also say that Pasquale Bruno was a refined genius and Baggio just a clumsy player.
Voto:
Casamorta. I'm 40 years old and I've seen him play live too... just leave it be. No one here says he wasn't a terrible person, but you can't deny, mixing up the perspectives, that he was the greatest player of all time. On the field, he did so many things that even that trickery takes a back seat.
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Yes, I get it. I understand that the glorification of that highly unsportsmanlike act can be questionable. For me, even that theft perpetrated against the most hated rivals, coupled with the gem five minutes later, contributes to the sporting greatness of the character. And inevitably, given how crazy what he has done both on and off the field is, it's difficult to separate the athlete from everything else and judge him solely as such.
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Yes, I got confused sorry ....
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You can hate him all you want, but it's ridiculous to deny that he is the greatest football player (I emphasize football player, not man) of all time by arguing how much of an idiot he was (citing Best then ... insane things). It offends your intelligence. He was a fool and also the greatest. Period.