geenoo Banned

DeRank : 3,10
DeAge™ : 7508 days • Here since 19 november 2005
Paolo Fresu Songlines / Night & Blue
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Primiballi, I forgot a :-) in the comment above. Online, I found these lines that seem to express well what’s inside these two beautiful discs: "The first CD, “Songlines,” contains all original compositions inspired by the melodic line that serves as a ‘break-the-ice’ in the song form. These compositions reach very high artistic peaks, dense with passion and pathos, which is one of the fundamental characteristics of the music offered by the quintet, where interplay and emotion have always prevailed over sterile technical display for its own sake. The second CD, titled “Night And Blue,” is the first album entirely of standards recorded by the quintet and is fundamentally a tribute to the night, to the more cinematic and melancholic jazz. A simply unique and unmissable disc that features touching versions of “Blue Gardenia” (made famous by Nat King Cole), “Blue In Green” by Miles Davis, and “Children Of The Night” by Wayne Shorter. An additional confirmation, then, of the state of grace and the unattainable art of a quintet that represents the best jazz produced in Italy."
Paolo Fresu Songlines / Night & Blue
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Sorry primiballi, since you're in the office, could you jot down the songs on a piece of paper for tonight, and send them to me here tomorrow morning... thanks (us old folks forget that in the age of the internet it only takes two or three clicks to have the complete list of everything or almost everything known). The album is really enjoyable. Long live jazz!
Belle and Sebastian Write about Love
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Yes, the review is nice. But I wouldn't want to repeat a sentence that I've already written too many times.
Rodrigo Cortès Buried - Sepolto
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Alia76, anyway, I don’t think I said that I admire Fontana, huh (this doesn’t change the fact that his works are valued at tens of millions of dollars at every auction)! I admire Caravaggio, Da Vinci, Brunelleschi, Giotto, and so on.
Rodrigo Cortès Buried - Sepolto
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Alia76: 1) I wrote Fontana in uppercase, but maybe your comment was a joke that I didn't get..: 2) And who said it’s the biggest hoax in the art world? You? Anyway, what I meant seems clear: the idea, even if it were a complete nonsense (the whole film in a box, a painting with a cut, etc.), is necessary to have first in this world. "I could do that too" is the phrase of fools.
Rodrigo Cortès Buried - Sepolto
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Look... you almost revealed the ending, and then it would have been bitter times. I was coming to look for you. Then, when you wrote "I did it with 800 euros," you forget a little detail... you did it AFTER seeing the movie. You know, I can also create a Lucio Fontana painting for 6.50 euros (5 euros for the white canvas, 1.50 for the knife), but I would also do it AFTER having seen it. In fact, his is worth tens of millions of euros, mine 1.50 euros (the canvas is worth nothing anymore). In short: an unforgivable phrase.
Neil Young Le Noise
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First it's ugly, now it's beautiful... try to make up your minds. There are people who need to decide whether to buy it, oh.
De Facto Légende du scorpion à quatre queues
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I agree with Cappio. Once, reviews like these would go straight into the trash.
Claudio Lazzaro Nazirock
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Pun, I've found the mistakes... but I want you to make an effort and find them on your own :-). As for the documentary, what is there to say? I believe very little, the usual crime labor. Some become enforcers, some deal drugs, some go to jail, some talk nonsense (in this case), some kill, and a few escape. Apparently, it's believed that denying the Holocaust is tough (in my area, there's a charming university professor who teaches us about it, but that's another story), that denigrating the different and weaker is manly... in reality, they are desperate kids. People screwed by life. And they may kill, beat, deny, bludgeon, but they will always be screwed. If we look back at History, they have always been screwed.
Dante Alighieri Comedìa (Divina Commedia)
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Casamorta & Co., you are right; why not review a work like this? In fact, it's a welcome idea; perhaps some people don't even know what it's about... and there's no need to nitpick the language used by the reviewer, but... if one is reviewing a book, one cannot stop at the first third just because it's more "easy" and digestible, right? And what about the others? Is Paradise any less significant? Or perhaps it needs to be understood first? So, let reviews on everything be encouraged, including the Bible. But let us at least be aware of how many pages the reviewed work consists of.