Fiumi di parole

This is, has been, and always will be the soundtrack of this humiliating farce (for sentient beings, at least) that continues to be called "elections."
Especially today, all the media will scramble to explain this way, calculate that way, elaborate on this, spouting thousands of percentages - generally unrelated - projections & prospects, pseudo-futuristic musings, stochastic ramblings, and so on.
As if they didn't know (but perhaps they haven't even realized, given the deplorable state of Italian journalism) that there are no results to comment on, simply because there are none, they do not exist, the elections themselves; which are truly a Reality Show done poorly, moreover.

Everything is decided by polls and projections LONG before the voting, with only the approximation of some miserable percentage point. Because Pavlov knows how the dogs will behave.

All of this isn’t said by the usual "someone who knows, who is in the know": it’s just logic.
And you don’t need to be Mr. Spock to get there.

And now, having finished breakfast, I’m off to have a good laugh reading the newspapers.
 
Graceland

Don't you just feel like shooting him? Ahr ahr ahr!
 
P&G lancia un nuovo spot per Fairy con Michelle Hunziker

All of a sudden, from an unspecified point, I hear a chilling scream echoing in the air:
"MARCOOO!!!!"
When enough is enough.

I’m tired of my Noble name always being associated with a poor fool devoid of any initiative: from "Marco how much do you cost" to "Marco big shoes and little meat" to the apostle mocked by Dario Fo in his "Mistero Buffo" and onward to reMarcando, I’ve always been furious but I’ve stoically overlooked it because, like Mou, I’m not an idiot.

But this time, when I heard that unbearable fucking Swiss squawking my name again - sneakily, without any warning - just like my grandmother used to call for me everywhere (usually to make me do some crappy chore), I snapped. And I shot the TV.

Unfortunately, I was in someone else’s house, because in my own home I don’t watch television, except for cooking shows and some old series from SVDM.

Man, were they pissed!!!
I shot the TV, not wiped out the family and burned down the house, for crying out loud!
They should have thanked me!!!
 
Mirah Bella Ciao

In the series of when the Mac (iMac... I mean not me Mac, as in Marco: my Mac that isn't called iMac because Mac is me, but because... UÁÁÁRGH!!!)... when the Mac, I was saying, accidentally shows you these things that you didn't remember downloading and you're happy to be updating your operating system.
Now I'm going to see what this disk is, while I'm at it.
Ps. Today a pseudo-communist breakfast, because this isn't a distinctly communist piece.

Oh: VOTE PAVLOV, you idiots!!! Ahr ahr ahr!!!
 
Crème Brulée

Do you remember the iTunes Store?
I'm pimping my iMac and by chance this album popped up that I had (legally: I didn't know how to crack yet) for some reason purchased a few years ago.
Maybe I only got it for this track - which I find, if nothing else through synesthesia, absolutely delightful - but the rest isn't bad either.
Oh dear: we’re on the chillout side and that sort of thing, but she’s a real musician.
P.S. Listened to it this morning during breakfast, even though crème brûlée is more of a romantic dinner finale; total pleasure & relaxation.
 
un link lungo

Here’s a gift to give to @[withor]. Provided they can see the link, because I don’t understand these things.
 
Lucinda Williams - "Changed The Locks" [Live From Austin, TX]

Have I ever told you about my friend Lucinda? Not that I know her personally, even though I saw her play a few years ago unfortunately in a dreadful place (no offense to the locals), a kind of former oratory by Lake Pusiano where there wasn’t even a square or a main street. I was saying that I don’t know her personally, and until about a decade ago, I didn’t know her at all as an artist; but she gave me, from the very first listens—without my knowing anything about her biography—the feeling of someone I’d love to sit with in some remote dive bar in some kind of godforsaken desert to get good and drunk, rambling nonsense about this shity life.

There’s no need for me to recount that said life: we all know—those of us who have been to hell at least—how it goes. Badly, although not always, perhaps (no hashtags this time).

As for the rest, a voice that spits in your heart and guts everything that’s there, including certain dirty, scratched loves, but always sublimated into an immense, unarmed tenderness. All of it played by a god: a kind of very "Dirty" Country-Rock but full of that desperate beauty that only great, intensely human and sensitive artists can convey.
 
The Cure - Purple Haze

Unlike many others, I almost always enjoy covers and tribute albums; in fact, sometimes certain tracks are - even according to the original authors - superior to the originals. Here, the good Jimi cannot, of course, voice his opinion, but I don't think he would have minded this seemingly disparate thing, which, however, I find more respectful of the original than it might seem.
P.S. The whole album (Various Artists - Tribute to Jimi Hendrix) is very interesting.
 
Blackfoot - Highway Song (Live, Zurich 1982)

Have I ever told you about that time I was playing in a rock band? Yes? A million times? Well, I bet you haven’t heard this particular story, so whoever wants to envy me is free to do so, and you can read on or not.

So after two months of rehearsals, we had put together a decent repertoire: we could hold a good couple of hours as long as, how can I put it... we stretched out (a lot) the songs. And the Blackfoot piece is quite stretchable, as you can hear and see (very poorly, but I included it to give you an idea) in the video.
In short, we were debuting at the Motoraduno in Plaino, a two-day event expecting five thousand people, especially since it coincided with the Sunsplash, which was then held in Osoppo.
I was nervous both inside and out, because physically and aesthetically, I didn’t embody the idea of the dirty, bad, and drugged rocker, and actually, aside from the large and varied amount of psychotropic substances I was taking, I was “out” yes, but outside the cliché.

But let’s skip all the memorable – I’m not saying this – concert and get to the end: let’s get to the REAL meat of it!
This was the last song, and we were going to stretch it out for at least twenty minutes.
The other guitarist and I – "Fender Lead II" vs "Gibson Diavoletto" – we chased each other through two verses each in endless solos, which then merged into the classic lysergic finale where we wanted to smash our instruments, we were so hyped.

But here we are at the point, at the TRUE purpose of this story.
During the alternating solos, when it was my turn to accompany Gianni Trevisan’s Gibson, my counterpart and vice versa, I would turn towards my amplifier (Vox) where there was always someone putting a few beers or a joint, etc. on top.
But that time, there was also a stunning imperial beauty leaning there, with a fierce mane, dressed all in leather, wearing a pair of those huge earrings that drive me wild and make the Merlot in my veins bubble.

So after the concert, since we had to play the next afternoon, someone pulled out a couple of Canadian tents, one for me and one for the drummer, because we both wanted to sleep on stage.

I’ll never understand how that extraordinary creature managed to materialize in my tent: I found her on top of me all of a sudden, whispering beautiful – and obviously false – things like: "Did you know you play like a god? You wouldn’t think so looking at you, you’re so intense."

Ah: the first – and last, in my case – Groupie is never forgotten.

The next morning, at nine, to celebrate the event – since he had also gotten into it (not in the same way, eh!) – the drummer woke me by blasting “Highway Star” full blast on the Spike where my tent was set up, bringing me a half beer and a bratwurst for breakfast.
The girls had disappeared; we didn’t even know their names.

Now that was living, damn it! Though I’m not complaining at all about that one either.
 
Claudio Lolli - Quelli come noi

A great antidepressant straight from the years of lead.
Those who, unfortunately, weren’t there cannot imagine how much fun it was to clash with various fascists and riot police; porphyry & Molotov like there was no tomorrow (we would later discover that, in fact, there wasn’t): an indescribable blast!
All seasoned with a soundtrack – stuff that makes you double over with laughter – ranging from this to the extraordinary Fausto' (which I know is beloved by some here) of "Suicidio".

Naturally, these amusements
were duly narrated by that mix of genius, anarcho-leftists – Andrea Pazienza above all – that was "Il Male"; a rag disguised as a newspaper that did things that millennials, and not only them, cannot even imagine could be done, innocently massified and slaughtered by the crass telemediatic conformism they are subjected to. Not everyone, of course, but we see what the majority is.

The fake front pages of major newspapers mixed with real ones with the complicity of many comrades running newsstands, for example, would be impossible today. News like "Tognazzi head of the BR" or "The third world war has broken out: the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor in the night," with the perfectly reproduced headlines of "Repubblica" and other major newspapers of the time, simply wouldn’t be understood in these dull times of continuous fake news, indistinguishable from the now non-existent "reality."

No revanchism, far from me: just history. The real one.
To greater things, and keep in mind... ALL BACKWARD!
 
Robbie Robertson - Fallen Angel

Speaking of The Band - mentioned in a listen just today, here - how can we not mention this great album released in those '80s years when, as some say, nothing good was produced, and bearing the mark of Robbie (rip) Robertson?
Ah: no one would say it’s produced by the Archangel, right?
 
Revolting Cocks - Do Ya Think I'm Sexy? (1993) (Official Music Video) (WMG)

It seems that Rod Odentro himself declared this is the GIVSTA version of the piece. All that eighties stuff we've heard, he didn't want it. It was his producers who imposed those synthetic & triggered sounds on him. There you go. Ugh!!!
 
Pat Metheny - Daybreak

Here’s a Patrizio Mentina that makes me feel like wagging my tail even though I'm a full-on cat person. After a long introduction of his, halfway through the piece, he kicks off with a killer riff that leads into a beautiful Theme with a nice back-and-forth Bridge. A track that inspires me with serenity, peace, warmth; both human and otherwise. Things I am very much in need of, in this week of woes, sciatic pain & rotten weather. Meow.
 
CAROSELLO CARNE MONTANA 1966 (GRINGO)

Look here, kids, and learn what it means to be old: we were really good at advertising! Not like you colorful toilets!

There are immense gems from that era: authentic masterpieces born from an unrepeatable period of great creative spirit.
Just think—only within the realm of the then "Recláme"—of figures like Gavino Sanna and Armando Testa: today, with our "impoverished language," no one would be able to understand slogans like the famous "Chi Vespa mangia la mela."
Um... Not even back then, to be honest, but there was the courage to convey messages of absolute semantic depth, without treating the people as an amorphous mass devoid of any cognitive stimulus, as happens in our disoriented times.
A slogan like that one "worked" precisely because it wasn't analyzed, dissected, explained: it passed through "assonance," simply because in five words it conveyed the entire concept of freedom, through "that" bite of "that" forbidden fruit.
People were much more receptive back then; they had just been educated by the new television medium and were capable of processing concepts, even if they didn't know the archetype, but understood the meaning.
Call me a VIP (Very Important Pedeón) or a Boomer or whatever, but I find today’s ads offensive to my intelligence.
I don't know about yours.
 
Dance Me to the End of Love - Madeleine Peyroux

I don't know...
When I hear the distant, but not so distant, echo of the soul of the Goddess who, for a cosmic, wonderful moment, disguised herself as human and sang like never before and never again will be heard, I close my eyes and travel back in time.
And I see Madeleine dancing with Billie and Leonardo. Until the end of that love we are losing, lost as we are in ourselves.

Ps. "The echo of the soul" is metonymy?
@[GrammarNazi] IF YOU'RE THERE, MAKE A SOUND!
Come back to correct us, as the good soul of Carolo the Pole would say.
 
supergulp - SIGLA DI TESTA -

I don't know if someone has already posted it, but if not, I would be disappointed.
Absolute imprinting, for me.
 
Fondazione — Trailer ufficiale | Apple TV+

Those who expect a faithful adherence to the famous trilogy of the Good Doctor will probably experience the classic "purist's annoyance."
Yes, because here they wanted to adapt Asimov's dry, less "televised" style, built more on tight dialogues and complicated almost theatrical plots (we're roughly in the fifties when the trilogy was released) to the language of current serials, with various FlashBacks, Flash Forwards, Cliffhangers, and whatever else.
We will see (or rather, I will see, since I’m only on the third episode of the first season) later if it has succeeded or not, given that the genders of some characters (like Salvor Hardin) have been reversed, probably because, in the trilogy, there were no relevant female figures—which are today legally mandatory—and this might raise eyebrows among the aforementioned purists.

As for the rest, the visual impact is extraordinary: the screenplay, makeup & hairstyling, dialogue, and acting level are impeccable.
The pace—at least at the beginning—is quite slow for now (similar to "Dune," especially the first one), but there are no shortages of action scenes with plenty of shootouts, explosions, and fights rendered with masterful magnificence.

In short: for now, I am satisfied and curious about what comes next.
 
You Might Need Somebody

She's a lovely chubby one, with the smile of a Rosalina because skinny girls are sad.
Muffled sounds, isilistíng, too precise?
Guitars pimped out with compressors cranked up?
Drums triggered?
Sounds too '80s?
Frankly, I couldn't care less.

Her version (I love covers done my way, some may have noticed but it doesn't matter) of "Imagine" remains the best for me.

And here I find her divine.
An interpretation that makes you positively (expanded masculine) empathetic.
 
OPENING - INTRO - STAR TREK STRANGE NEW WORLDS SEASON 01 - 4K (UHD)

The second season is amazing, perhaps better than the first.
Here is everything that we, Trekkers, wanted from the franchise created by the extraordinary humanistic vision of the ever-praised Guru: namely Gene Roddenberry.

But since we often talk about - and rightly so! - Music, a thought about the soundtrack is inevitable!!!

The counterpoints, the harmonizations, the respect for the themes that created our universe are of a sublime, wagging beauty. Meow!!!

All played by a real orchestra, with the "right" use of electronics.

Until boldly reaching where no one has gone before.
Except the helpless, as I like to say.
 
Tom Waits - "Pony"

Do I need to say something?
 
Una Storia Sbagliata - Loredana Bertè - Faber(amico fragile)[Tributo a Fabrizio De Andrè]

Let's not forget the scandalous moment Adriano Celentano had in this extraordinary tribute.
Let's not forget Franco Battiato, whose voice breaks, overwhelmed by the words of the Great Genoese.
Loredana sings this as if it were her own.
And it is.
 
link rotto

We are Friuli.
 
King Crimson - 21st Century Schizoid Man

Too pampered here.
But throw it away!