donjunio

DeRank : 7,00
DeAge™ : 7455 days • Here since 11 january 2006
Mercury Rev Strange Attractor
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Great tip as always, honestly they have bored me for a looooong time......
Jack London Il Vagabondo Delle Stelle
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Nice mention. The best work from the "engaged" London (assuming that the seemingly lighter one wasn't), surpassed only by "Martin Eden."
Motorpsycho Timothy's Monster (disc 1)
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The best "double" of the grunge era.
Gruntruck Inside Yours
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Welcome to this cage of madmen. The album isn't bad, raw and wild, a classic product for completionists and fans of the garden of sound.
Hunter S. Thompson Paura e disgusto a Las Vegas (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas)
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I completely agree with Supersoul, and you just have to read the lyrics of "Revolution Blues" by Neil Young to understand why it’s exactly as he says.
Afghan Whigs Gentlemen
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"When you're high and lost in the clouds/ Then you know it's time to get down, again"....
Neil Young Sugar Mountain: Live at Canterbury House 1968
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@azzo. On debaser there's only one "ologo": the good Mien with Todd Rundgren, everyone else pales in comparison! @zuma. Yes, I saw that the site has been reactivated, it's about time! @currahee72..I would prefer a nice live show from the 80s, there are so many facets of the good Neil to rediscover.
Colour Haze 5 Questions To Stefan Koglek
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perfect opening, and the rest is no less....welcome back!
Neil Young Sugar Mountain: Live at Canterbury House 1968
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The completely untouched pieces present in the "archives" (at least for this round) should indeed be only eight, but I prefer to wait for those instead of getting excited about yet another acoustic live recording, given that my room is already full of bootlegs. So, albums for "completists," or the perfect opportunity to make a nice Christmas gift considering the season. About Buffalo: as long as they were alive (since "last time around" was released after the band had already split and Bruce Palmer wasn't even involved), the famous contradictions and tensions between Stills and Young had been an incentive, a resource, a push to surpass each other in songwriting and the actual performance of the pieces. I don't believe Neil had anything to prove regarding the BS experience after a masterpiece like "Again," as he was already revered and respected in the scene; it's no coincidence that Arthur Lee asked him to produce "Forever Changes."
Neil Young Sugar Mountain: Live at Canterbury House 1968
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mmmm "controversial successes" for what, Buffalo Springfield? The album is superfluous to vote on: Young is a man alone in command, no one will ever take the pink jersey away from him, and this live performance allows us to appreciate little-known gems like "Nowadays Clancy can't even sing" or "The last trip to tulsa". But Neil, now you’ve really pissed us off: release the unreleased stuff from those archives!