zaireeka

DeRank : 12,20
DeAge™ : 8068 days • Here since 8 may 2004
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni
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Bosses, can we ban unaccompanied minors under 18 from the website? If we do that, we might as well do it for the over 40s who are a bit clueless like me!! :-D
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni
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Alia, damn, how naughty have we been, and without even consulting each other!!!
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni
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I had started reading with the best intentions (thinking to myself: I wish I could review a classic work with competence, not just passion). Then I read "...why do they bother us at school with a bunch of depressed writers (Foscolo, Leopardi, Carducci, Svevo, Pirandello)?" Depressed— the only thing that struck you about Leopardi (and company) is that he was depressed. Grow up, kid, grow up!!! And forget about Mozart, you're not ready yet. PS. I would love to meet your teachers; they must bear some responsibility too...
Roxy Music Flesh + Blood
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"Pawn Hearts", SORRY
Roxy Music Flesh + Blood
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It may be, but I really liked it, a hallucinatory cut-up worthy of the best Burroughs ;-). However, those are lines from Moonchild (KC), not from Pawn Hearth (VDGG album). Am I wrong?
Public Image Limited 9
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The vote
Public Image Limited 9
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I know I should be familiar with him, but unfortunately that's not the case (I have some serious gaps in the field of "classics"). He seems like a very interesting character (a resentful figure from Caposelliana memory?? Wonderful..). But above all, you, from what you've written, seem like a very interesting "character" with "varied tastes"!! Splendid review, especially since it's direct and knowledgeable. Well done!
Belle and Sebastian Write about Love
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@Alia76. It's really a shame. But my daughter just turned 10, and certain mistakes are still allowed for her, at least in my imagination ;-)
Belle and Sebastian Write about Love
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@Fedezan76. Look for the albums with the two mentioned tracks.
Claudio Lazzaro Nazirock
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Did you know that Borges tells of an ancient heretical religious sect (fantastorical? I can't remember) called the Speculari, who believed that for every man there existed an "inverse" image of him in Heaven? The more one sinned on earth, the holier his counterpart in Heaven behaved. Therefore, they were convinced that in order for their celestial images, the true ones, to achieve Beatitude, they had to exhaust all possible sins on earth and commit every wickedness. I remembered this while reading the first sentence of your review. By any chance, is that Abba Eban (was he?) one of them?