pi-airot

DeRank : 2,86
DeAge™ : 6535 days • Here since 19 july 2008
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young Ohio / Find The Cost Of Freedom
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Perhaps I will be irreverent, or my comparisons might be too lofty, but I can't listen to (at least in my mind) this song and not think of other students, and their professors, who today raise their voices to defend the intellectual dignity of our nation. Here, they are not heard, some troublemaker strategically manages to ridicule them, and there is not a single artist who cares to show a sign of sympathy. And don’t come to tell me "It's only rock'n'roll"...
Ton Steine Scherben Keine Macht Für Niemand
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Ah, don’t worry: nothing is being called into question. At most, we’re just adding another piece. Thank you for the visit!
Sabbat Disembody
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sorry, the rating for the review...
Sabbat Disembody
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I read the review thinking it was an album by the English Sabbat (do you have "History of a Time to Come" in mind?) and from what you write, there can't be too much distance between the two bands. I'll check it out!
Howard Phillips Lovecraft La Ricerca Onirica Dello Sconosciuto Kadath
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Excellent job with the review and the recommendation; personally, I also give 5 to the work, precisely because it's a draft, precisely because it might be unfinished. It's as engaging as a dream, chaotic like a dream, a true succession of Russian nesting dolls, with all the space-time deformations of a dream. While other fantasy works may be more cohesive, consistent, and complete, I rarely find the raw power of these pages. The ending, then, is something truly unique: Lovecraft seems to describe, with forty years in advance, Kubrick's visions of the final sequence of "2001: A Space Odyssey." Nothing can shake the belief that these pages represented a source of inspiration for the director.
? (Ibis) Canti d'innocenza, Canti d'esperienza
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Just a clarification at the beginning: there’s a rather popular site (but can we name names?), structured like a sort of online magazine, that also publishes profiles on albums considered "milestones," historical bands divided by genre, and overviews of the history of sub-genres of rock/pop music. In the section about the history of hard rock, there is a complete omission of what was produced in Italy in the 70s, and it claims that the best Italian album of that genre (and, it seems to read between the lines, also the first) is "Colpo di Coda" by Litfiba. What do you think?
Giuseppe Verdi Traviata
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You remind me of the Legnanesi, when Mabilia tells Teresa the plot of La Traviata and Teresa comments, "Pudevan no ciamàla La Loegia?" (trad.: "Couldn’t they have called it The Whore?"). I didn’t vote for Verdi due to my incompetence—or out of reverential fear.
The Tell Tale Hearts The Tell Tale Hearts
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1972 or 1973, if I remember correctly.