puntiniCAZpuntini

DeRank : 14,44 • DeAge™ : 7957 days

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  • Here since 21 october 2003
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Ozzy Broke 6 Ribs falling off his motorcycle (it had 4 wheels, but how the hell did he manage that?) and for now he’s breathing with a machine. He's out of danger, but it will take him a while to recover; it's believed that this year’s OzzFest will be in tha fknass....AZZZZ!!
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Takeshi Kitano, the one from Brothers? If that's the case, Tarantino is just f*****g him more than anything else.
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I have a ton of Stanley, if I'm not mistaken he's made either 10 or 11 solo albums, two or three with George Duke, and a couple more with Larry White. The best is "If the Bass Could Talk," followed by "Time Exposure." "Hideaway" doesn't excite me as much as these two, download them, he puts out an album a year (for almost 30 years!!) and he doesn't care if you don't buy them... ;-)
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Ah!! I forgot the most important thing: BOBO IS NOT ON THIS ALBUM. Bobo (Barron Ricks) was working with the Beastie Boys at that time as a percussionist (you know Ill Communication, Bobo On The Corner?) and he later joined Cypress Hill on IV (which is indeed the BEST ALBUM). This is a mistake, eh!! Well, I've already written the review!! ;-)
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And then their masterpiece song (this is obviously personal opinion) is Make a Move, which starts with the phrase Samuel L. Jackson says in Pulp Fiction before killing (Ezekiel etc. etc.), then there are the gunshots and B-Real kicks in with "Smokin Mcs Like A Bowl of Buddah," and it's in III. Damn, they really repeated themselves!!! ....I might as well have just written a review, I guess :-)
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Great review, but you might also like B.Sunday more than III and IV. However, the fact remains that with Black Sunday they created a Funk rap that MORE OR LESS (I emphasize more or less) had already been heard before. With III and IV, they brought out a "Dark-Rap" (it doesn't exist, but if you've heard them, you understand me) that no one had EVER, I mean EVER done before. After Temples or f Boom (III), rappers of that genre multiplied in New York, like the first of Mic Geronimo (The Natural) and Method Man's first solo, which, not by chance, both exclusively talk about weed (Method in those solos, with the others from Wu, returns to chess and swords, etc., etc.).
All this fuss to say that they definitely repeated themselves afterward; many b-boys and others bought this, but III and IV were bought by so many, so many B-Boys. Damn, they really repeated themselves.
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My father (who still thanks me for Piazzolla, not knowing that he should thank you) has everything you can find on the market from Hancock, and I still haven't heard a bad one; I'm sure if you pick it up, you'll like it. Going back to this, it's not a matter of being a novice; it's really a "show-off," there's Clarke in every style, but it lacks the steak to put the sauce on, zero substance, it's truly a case of "technique and experimentation FOR ITS OWN SAKE." However, I recommend what Kosmo wrote; that is high-class Jazz-Fusion...
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I bought them because I read a review that compared them to the Bungle, so I passed it on to you. For the download of Mr., go to www.bunglefever.com (or maybe .net, I can't remember), there are a ton of live tracks and some of the official ones, so you can get an idea.
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from Rumore: """ / "Back in Black," the album from 1980, has been certified by the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) as the second best-selling album in music history. Currently, 42 million copies of this rock milestone have been sold. """ The first is Micheal pedofilo Jackson with Thriller, with 56 million...
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Thank you for the review, these little guys are always efficient; if only the post office were like this too...