hymnen Banned

DeRank : 0,64
DeAge™ : 6509 days • Here since 13 august 2008
Tim Buckley Goodbye And Hello
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"Pleasent Street" would be enough on its own, but they are all beautiful and well-arranged.
Tim Buckley Starsailor
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what a drag "song to the siren" is the only track with 5 (votes) on an album with 8 (votes)
Bud Powell The Amazing vol.1
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but does the 6 exist? what a sublime pianist, my favorite at the time in jazz (the reviewer deserves 4 slaps..)
Thelonious Monk Brilliant Corners
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milestone anticipated the davis of kind of blue in the modal that gave coltrane the inspiration for his subsequent extraordinary works
Pere Ubu The Modern Dance
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What the heck is this?
Giacinto Scelsi Natura Renovatur
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Jasinto Scelsi a unique sound research Aion, Phaft, The Songs of Capricorn, Anagamin, four pieces on a single note...
Thelonious Monk Genius Of Modern Music Vol. 1 & 2
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So Parker's compositions didn't have a musical value; they were a foundation for his unique improvisations—ne bop, ne hard bop, ne heavy metal, ne pop, ne dance, ne contemporanea, ne barocca—unique. In Monk, on the other hand, his authenticity was, conversely, in the composition. Each one created his own island in a different way. If it’s not like that for you, that’s fine too.
Thelonious Monk Genius Of Modern Music Vol. 1 & 2
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But you know, labels are always a bit hit or miss; it’s bebop and we’re all happy and content, but no, it doesn’t work like that. Between Parker and Gillespie, musically and stylistically, it was like saying day and night; they had nothing in common, and the same would go for Monk and Powell. Each of them had their own imprint and identity. I've always loved Parker for a visceral reason, in the sense that he made me feel a few centimeters taller when I listened to him, and I still do. His instinctive and romantic madness left a mark.
Roy Harper Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith
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I think the masterpiece is flat baroque even though all the albums are of extraordinary level.
Roy Harper Stormcock
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I would prefer the album "Flat Baroque." Anyway, Harper is among the most brilliant musical minds of the '60s and '70s.