donjunio

DeRank : 7,00
DeAge™ : 7456 days • Here since 11 january 2006
Firewater The Ponzi Scheme
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beautiful advice fest, thanks
Neil Young And Crazy Horse Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
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@rocknroll. Personally, I don't think the rating of the album is that important (4 or 5 stars doesn't really change much, we're not accountants). When I said this is a 5-star album, I meant that EKTIN is not a transitional album as you defined it, but rather a precise point of arrival, so much so that he would return to the electric archetype many times… that he then followed it up with two more complete and varied works is a positive for Neil, but not a negative against EKTIN. Bye!
Neil Young And Crazy Horse Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
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one extra point for the review for mentioning "running dry," one of the most underrated and lesser-known tracks by Neil....
Neil Young And Crazy Horse Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
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Damn it, in the de-database you can find another review of EKTIN, written by one of the best youngophiles on the site, cece65: you can find it under the heading "Neil Young & Crazy Horse."
Neil Young And Crazy Horse Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
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To the editors: is it possible to title the album with its correct wording, that is, "Neil Young and Crazy Horse"?
Neil Young And Crazy Horse Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
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for me this is a 5-star album: it’s the album where Neil arranges voice and guitar, and thanks to the help of the Crazy Horse he finds the elixir of long life in guitar noise, influencing hundreds of epigones. The tracks are all classics. The chemistry with Danny Whitten is wonderful, even if the best Neil-Crazy Horse albums will paradoxically be the next ones, "Zuma" and "Rust never sleeps."
Neil Young Are You Passionate
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Certainly one of Neil's less memorable albums: his rhythm & blues interlude was certainly more inspired when he released "This Note's for You" with the Blue Tones in 1988 (another album I have on my list to review as soon as I have a bit of free time). Not surprisingly, the two best tracks are the ones where Neil brings out his old claws: the rhetoric of "Let's Roll," in which Neil dusts off some of his 80s populism dedicating the piece to the famous rebellious flight of September 11, and the Crazy Horse-like "Goin' Home." For fans only.
Takashi Miike Visitor Q
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very beautiful
Counting Crows August And Everything After
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they played at being r.e.m. without having the same depth... but many memories are connected to "mr. jones" and "round here"
The God Machine One Last Laugh In A Place Of Dying
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RIP Jimmy..great album and an important gap in the de-database has been filled.