Voto:
Look, popcorn, I watched a film with a great sustained rhythm, with no dips in tension except for those imposed by a clear albeit non-linear narrative, featuring crisp dialogues that at times felt just like a music video. For example, the scene of John's accident (1, 2, 3, 4 – 1, 2, 3, 4, etc...). If you've seen some long uninterrupted takes packed with dialogues, I must have definitely watched the wrong film.
Voto:
A nice little story shot with the rhythm of a music video... And anyway, the first time Ink takes off the hood, you really understand who they are. :-)
Voto:
Mmhhh, in the end I’ve read three books by Paul Auster. "The Invention of Solitude" seems the most interesting to me, at least regarding the story of the author’s father. In the second part, or "The Book of Memory," I got lost; too many disconnected, fragmentary, distracting things... "The Music of Chance" I didn’t like at all; the events narrated left me with nothing: the road trip, the poker game with those two rich idiots, the slavery of gambling debts, the erection of that damn wall that serves no purpose... And especially the ending, which seemed downright disgraceful to me. "Mr. Vertigo" is the same as above... I reached the end just to see where Auster was going with it, and when I got there, my desire to say Fuck You was overwhelming. :-) I’m not saying he can't write, quite the opposite... But I'm afraid that might not be enough...
Voto:
I haven't listened to it in a while, but if I remember correctly, "Western Culture" is more like the albums of Art Bears (aside from Dagmar's voice) than the earlier ones. And speaking of the earlier albums, you forgot "Desperate Straits," which is indeed credited to Henry Cow & Slapp Happy. :-) Bye.
Voto:
Well, I haven't seen the movie so maybe I should keep my mouth shut... However, I've watched some clips from the show on YouTube and I have to say that the mobster who wants to stop being a mobster or only wants to do it after coffee, along with the two priests doing ecclesiastical marketing, aren't half bad... So, I mean, I expected worse... But maybe the movie really does suck, you know...
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Since the staff notation makes no sense, I'm posting a link here (http://imslp.org/) where you can find a ton (like, a ton) of sheet music (obviously outdated and artificial) in digital format. Who knows, maybe someone will be interested... And Bob Dylan is always cool!
Voto:
Come on... It’s really done poorly... I liked the first one a lot, the comic isn’t bad either...
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Well, the second season of "the walking dead" instead sucks...
Voto:
The audio is terrible, but the video is on YouTube: Genesis con Ray Wilson a Domenica in (1998) - Shipwrecked + intervista Michael Rutherford says more or less what I've written above, but it's worth noting that he's prompted by Frizzi... Nevertheless, I am absolutely sure that both Rutherford and Banks thought "calling all stations" was crap. :-) Maybe Ray Wilson didn't, huh, but they did. :-)
Voto:
I remember when Genesis came to Italy for the tour of this album, they participated in a TV show, Domenica in, I think... They played a song, I don't remember which one, but to convince the fans to attend the concert, they recalled that in the seventies Italy was the first country to notice them and promised a nice medley of old songs... They probably thought that "Calling All Stations" was a piece of junk as well...
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