ZiOn

DeRank : 19,12
DeAge™ : 7902 days • Here since 28 october 2004
Alec Empire Intelligence and Sacrifice
Voto:
Judgment: incredible, especially the second cd. "26491998" is terrifying, 29 minutes of pure terror. Stunning, her most beautiful album alongside the masterpiece of '96 "The Destroyer". Burn, Berlin, Burn!!!
Daft Punk Daft Club
Voto:
Yes, but it sounds good! :D And sorry, it doesn’t seem to me that Basement Jaxx, Slum Village, or Air (I think they’re in there too) are unknown, quite the opposite... It may be a commercial operation, but it’s definitely well done. I agree on "Nite Versions" by Soulwax, beautiful just like "Any Minute Now". And live, they’re amazing... Bye :-)
Daft Punk Daft Club
Voto:
Whether it's a grim commercial operation or not, there are RMX like those of Slum Village and Basement Jaxxx that hold extremely high musical value. Don, you seem excessively biased about it ;-) Saludos
Canyon Empty Rooms
Voto:
Who sang in Atari Teenage Riot? :-))
Alec Empire Intelligence and Sacrifice
Voto:
I'm listening to it now, monstrous. Judgment at the end of the album ;-)
Daft Punk Daft Club
Voto:
Certo! Inviami il testo e procederò con la traduzione.
Daft Punk Daft Club
Voto:
Well
Glenn Branca The Ascension
Voto:
I listened to it during my rock rebellious phase, quite remarkable. If I remember correctly, amidst the chaos of guitars, there should also be Lee Ranaldo, two years before the debut of Sonic Youth. By the way, he is also interviewed in a documentary made for SY's 20th anniversary, noting the significant influence he had on them. Quite a character, by the way :-))) Saludos
Daft Punk Alive 1997
Voto:
Ah the votes, I didn't like this one at all GATTI. Okay, you like Daft Punk and it's clear, now try to mix it up and talk about something else. You’re not thinking of reviewing the bootlegs and the first demo from '91 too, are you?? :-))) Saludos
Daft Punk Alive 1997
Voto:
Sfascia, I find your position respectable (also well articulated with your usual crazy pseudo-humour), but I don't share it at all. The issue of "how much they sound" has always been one of the strongholds of opponents of certain electronic music who, probably accustomed to a "classic" live setup (guitar + bass + drums), cannot conceive of a live performance of this kind. That was a bit of my limitation at 13, but the other way around: if I didn't see a DJ and an MC at the microphone, I would move on to something else, and that's a limitation that needs to be overcome in every possible way. Of course, tastes remain personal (everyone has their preferences, that's obvious), but a bit of open-mindedness wouldn't hurt at all ;-)