puntiniCAZpuntini

DeRank : 14,42 • DeAge™ : 7942 days

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  • Here since 21 october 2003
Voto:
Well, it's obvious that he's the greatest guitarist of all time, given that everyone says so, from Eric Clapton to Joe Satriani, passing through Pete Townshend. I didn't want to contradict the fact that he was the best, just wanted to throw in the usual two pieces of nonsense like in a puzzle magazine :)
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Navarf is a bit of a mess since there are more than 50 records; I'll give you one for each decade 50 (besides Kind Of Blue): Birth Of The Cool (it's a compilation but it's really great) - 60: Miles Smiles - 70: one of the two I reviewed or Big Fun - 80: Tutu - 90: Doo Bop (watch out, it's a Rap album). The downside is that everyone tells you their favorites, so you’ll get a bit tangled up :)
Voto:
But you know Giubbo, you actually understood everything? The point was precisely that: since the criticism accused the electric Davis of composing excellent music with the flaw of lacking a beginning and an end, a structure, anything that would allow listeners to understand what kind of music it was, I tried to say something without structure as well. Then he was accused of being too sophisticated, risking not being understood, so I shot out an opening that might seem sensible but is actually just a list of words. I left something comprehensible because Miles did the same with the percussion, which are the only non-electric instruments present on the album. Even though just the fact of including tribal percussion in a Jazz album for Columbia was something new, it wasn’t exactly innovative since a certain Zawinul was already proposing such things. However, at that time, Zawinul had little to lose, whereas Davis had everything to lose by intentionally going against the criticism with albums like this. They had reproached him for the shift from classical piano to Fender piano, and in retaliation, he switched from double bass to electric bass. They scolded him again, and he even made the trumpet electric. Luckily, they eventually stopped giving him a hard time; otherwise, in '78, he would have pulled out something Techno-House.
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Oh, at least that's what Dad says in an interview he gave after his death; maybe he was just talking nonsense to seem cool since Jimi couldn't call him out on it.
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He taught me the basics of notes and scales, a self-taught musician with a caveat, considering that Dad played the tenor saxophone. :)
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In the end, they are 100 degenerates more or less similar, since there isn’t much difference between "nu-jazz" and the union of "jazz" and "experimental," just as "contemporary" combined with "jazz" equals "nu-jazz." Essentially, it's Experimental Psychedelic Jazz Fusion, which means everything and nothing at the same time; I included them all to avoid mistakes. "Moreover," there isn't even one, but it’s equally certain that nothing is missing :D
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Well, with Miles Davis, you can never go wrong, Enea :)
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...ok... :D
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what's horrifying? and trashy?
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Tell me you made a mistake in entering the genders.