ma proprio proprio

DeRank : 0,00
DeAge™ : 7656 days • Here since 24 june 2005
Backstreet Boys Never Gone
Voto:
For me, the person who wrote this review is someone from MTV or the record label that spreads these reviews around the web for advertising purposes. Sorry, but the review really sounds like an advertising slogan...
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
oh my god it doesn’t seem at all like her review..., let me read it again, ok..
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
no, that's not fair... at least a clue...
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
It has nothing to do with it, but can someone explain to me why the super bosses of debase are called "nani"? Thanks... screw the whale...
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
a rather brief review anyway... but not bad..
I would give the album a nice 3, but I’ll wait to listen to it a bit more..
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
Guys, you're really killing me..hahaha..:-))
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
I agree with Logic about the majors influencing the radio, for sure...
Ajeje: it doesn't seem to me like the worst lyrics I've ever read, sure, definitely not the best either; I don't know underground Italian artists, so I can't compare. The problem is that in Italian you hear everything and understand everything, any lyrics are much more critiquable; are we really so sure that many English lyrics that seem so beautiful to us are actually that deep and/or intelligent? Of course, this text compared to "la donna cannone" (just randomly) is laughable... that's for sure…
Ah: for me, the fact that certain artists (often inferior) emerge rather than others is also due to the typical Italian "ahumma ahumma"... in short, connections, recommendations, etc. matter, eh... and this inevitably favors (it's a matter of probability) mediocrity... peace.
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
holden: ok, but then why don’t they do it? I think it’s simply because true art is really harder to understand in a 5-minute listen while driving from work to the gym, right? Think about it, is "Wish You Were Here" more catchy and pleasant to the masses, or "Interstellar Overdrive"? Fundamentally, I agree with you, but why does this happen? Maybe we need to distinguish between what is entertainment music and music in an artistic sense. People want to be entertained… (which is understandable..) I love "Wish You Were Here," but "Interstellar" is a whole different thing… I agree with the "laziness" perhaps due to the speeding up of average times in our society… everything has to be done quickly… and so does listening to music… Anyway, I find it difficult to support this discussion because I’m quite ignorant in the matter… sorry :-)
Cesare Cremonini Maggese
Voto:
Nice talk. Totis: I see it a bit like you do, that is, it’s clear that radio and TV, by broadcasting what is more commercial etc., are killing what true art is, experimentation etc. But I can’t help but ask: what alternative do you propose/do we propose? If there were no radio and TV, how could ā€œgoodā€ knowledge reach the masses? Especially regarding music, museums don’t exist... I believe it would be difficult anyway.
Perhaps the problem is more specifically: the money that drives radio and TV to transmit what is easier and more appealing to the masses. They themselves are not evil tools; it’s just that everything is governed by advertising and audience... but it has to be this way, no one does anything for nothing... we’re not in the times of enlightened emperors who financed art and culture out of their own pockets...
But perhaps the truth is still that fundamentally true art, experimentation, poetry are by definition reserved for a niche audience, at least in their time... they are destined to be valued only in the future.. and here, it simply reminds me of Van Gogh...