@[Pink84] the live concert album you released yesterday is out!!!
 
Leighton Koizumi feat Tito And Thee Brainsuckers Born Loser (Murpy And The Mob)

I put it back on the USB stick… let’s pay tribute to the master Pinhead a.k.a. @[danip], to Tito, to Leighton… to Leighton, guys…

The best Cover album??!! For me, no doubt…
 
Szechuan Capital indeed 23 is THE Negro number. The 90s can now be considered the kindergarten of Rap.
 
Yasujiro Ozu - Tarda primavera

"Late Spring"
by Yasujiro Ozu (1949)

#35mm
 
Keith Jarrett - De Drums

Keith Jarrett (8 out of 10)
"De drums" from: Fort Yawuh
1973 (Impulse!)

#jazzlegends
 
Depeche Mode - One Caress #pezziminori a track that deserves to be remembered more, even by the Modes themselves... stunning melody and an incredibly intense vocal performance!
 
Dire Straits - News #pezziminori Too many, far too many, Communiquè is treated like a mere photocopy of the first homonymous one. In my opinion, it still shines (even today) with its own light and is definitely the album by Knopfler and company that I listen to most frequently and gladly.
 
Music from other worlds (subtitle: 'listen to a fool)
Ketama, Toumani Diabate, Danny Thompson - Mani Mani Kuru
"...so just stay among yourselves listening to Peruvian bands with bagpipes that only a handful of people listen to, and not even their relatives buy them!" (quote)
HERE I AM! PRESENT! I, the pompous know-it-all, frequenter of the most foul-smelling and hidden niches, who "will never be part of a majority" as that character said in that movie... I propose that you listen to some of the most unimaginable stuff I’ve stumbled upon over the years. You, take my word for it, lose five minutes of your time listening to (reading, watching, eating, sniffing...) the same things you already know how they are, that you don’t risk, simply end up with an atrophied brain.
3) Ketama, Toumani Diabaté, Danny Thompson - Songhai
After all, everything always revolves around the same thing etc. etc. (2). And, well, it was Phina who instilled the virus of gypsy music in me, so I started searching for records by Pata Negra, Camaron De La Isla, Tomatito, Vicente Amigo, Ketama...
Here, the Ketama, with their already rich platter (flamenco, gypsy rhumba, klezmer music), also added Arabic and Middle Eastern spices, an amazing group, but while digging through their discography I stumbled upon this "Songhai." Warning Masterpiece! WARNING MASTERPIECE! WARNING MASTERPIECE! A collaboration of three, an incredibly rich and spicy dish: the Ketama contribute flamenco, Toumani Diabaté adds Africa, and Danny Thompson (yes, the one from Pentangle!) brings in English folk and jazz; add some Middle Eastern spices, scents of klezmer, and memories of nomadic peoples in Europe as well as Africa, and prepare the baking soda...
Fantastic album, music from all the Southern parts of the world, unheard of (in the sense of never heard before)! If you've rightfully applauded for "Talking Timbuktu," the splendid collaboration between Ry Cooder and Ali Farka Touré, you won't be able to remain indifferent to "Songhai."
There’s also a "Songhai 2," beautiful but just a tad (just a tad) below the first; I have both, you do as you please...
 
Kim Squad - Animal - Live at DOC

Episode 2, and so we also take care of these Nobles

The start is entrusted to Broken Promises, a well-honed thoroughbred that rides the electric storms of the band, with the usual alternation of dynamics that the group has learned to balance since their beginnings, when they roamed like a Roman version of the Violent Femmes, carrying a load of buskers' acoustic music. The guitars quiver, occasionally calmed by Roberta's organ and the discreet touch of Palmieri's bass.

They even shot a video for it around Torvajanica.

Low-budget stuff that Videomusic airs a couple of times before shelving it alongside the losers.

The World’s a Burn is a pounding 4/4 that hits hard and references the Standells (“I’m a young barracuda swimming in the deep blue see, I mean barracuda, don’t you mess with me”) before the concluding crescendo.

Which live never arrives before the fifth minute.

To the chagrin of those who wrinkle their noses remembering that Talk Talk by the Music Machine didn’t even reach the second minute, and who look horrified at the timing of Renaissance, the epic track that closes the album proudly showcasing its 11 minutes during which everything happens, with the "Greek" getting frisky on the guitar keyboard until Possamai, touched, comes to the rescue jamming with her keyboard.

On paper, it’s the stuff of 80s porn, in short.

Or from the vinyl frying pans of the 70s.

But here the game works. And quite well. It sounds proud and brash.

There’s an air of sizzling amplifiers and the scent of sex.

7 Tex Mex & Gilbert Gin is instead a triumph of Doors-like keyboards.

Serge Est Un Salaud is sung in Cambuzat's tongue.

It’s a ballad that smells of French hotels, with voices caressing and longing with lust, featuring Francois and Roberta taking on the roles once played by Gainsbourg and Birkin.

Macaibo wraps its thighs around sambuca-soaked folk/punk. The following year it will end up in one of the many small compilations that Italian rock of those years, in search of visibility, fills its lungs with. The compilation is titled Rockbeef, and Kim Squad stands nicely next to Liars, D.H.G., Not Moving, Settore Out, and Views. They bring it to TV on the stage of DOC kindly offered to them by Renzo Arbore.

The following year, Kim Squad will begin to shed their skin, the first to legitimize Italian in a "physically" rock context (and it will be a Frenchman, it’s good to remember this), and to recruit new people (including Cesare Basile fleeing from Candida Lilith, ready to launch the Quartered Shadows project, NdLYS), then gradually disbanding to make way first for Francois’s introspective bitter ballads, and then for the decadent aesthetics of Gran Teatro Amaro, where the dreams of rock 'n' roll crashed against the wall of adult awareness.
 
The Kim Squad And Dinah Shore Zeekapers - Macaibo

And after the Master, the Reverend

Beautiful and damned. Rather, young and bastards.

And fast, like a meteor. No: bright. Like a comet.

It was May 9, 1987, when Rai Stereo Uno broadcasted live the final of Indipendenti, the contest of Fare Musica that awarded the best emerging Italian band of the year. On the stage of the Rai Auditorium in Turin, four bands: the useless Funky Lips from Turin, the Entropia from Palermo, the good Lonely Boys from Porto Sant’Elpidio, and then… them.

A band with rock 'n' roll deep in their bones that devoured everyone, critics and audience alike. Visceral, derailing, filthy with rock 'n' roll like rarely heard before in Italy. It has the garage rock in it with which we are still all sharing the dream of a vibrant and radical rock 'n' roll, but there’s much more. There's the maudit air of seventeen-year-old François-Régis Cambuzat and there’s the killer guitar of Giorgio Curcetti that brings to the stage the infected orgies of the MC5.

And there’s the sweat that makes the make-up run around the eyes of Roberta Possamai and Elena Palmieri. Who knows what else lies a bit lower.

Behind them is the relentless drumming of Angelo Pinna who does not take a step back, follows the assault, unyielding, monolithic.

Explosive. Angry and fierce.

They win the final of Indipendenti, of course, just 40 days after the first round played on the stage of the first edition of Arezzo Wave, alongside the small glories of the time (Weimar Gesang, Rats, Party Kidz, Underground Life, Sleeves, Ritmo Tribale, Art Boulevard, etc. etc.).

After that, they shut themselves inside the Studios Pollicino in Rome with Oderso Rubini, and within just two days, Young Bastards is ready. Mixing included.

Because the Kim Squad plays with blood.

And everything must be recorded before the last drop slips away.

The album is, in fact, a live in the studio. And that’s how it sounds.

It's a tearing on the living body of rock ‘n’ roll.

Underneath, the flesh still moves, macerating in alcohol with every lash.
 
The Kim Squad and Dinah Shore Zeekapers : Renaissance
I can't take it anymore.
After Mirror Blues by Died Pretty, the most thrilling, explosive, tumultuous, and devastating ride that the history of garage punk can recall. Francois, Giorgio, Elena, Angelo, and Roberta. Rome, 1987.
 
These @[IlConte] will also be playing tomorrow in Verbania; Hard Stoner with a vengeance!! It’s going to be a real push under the stage... Muschio - "Fungus" Red Sound Records
 
mui zyu - Ghost with a Peach Skin (Official Video)
from China an album waiting to be listened to, it seems interesting
 
Kim Squad and Dinah Shore Zeekapers - Broken Promises

I think I used to have a cassette of this album… it’s not available on CD…
Oh my goooooddddddd!
 
The Reds, Pinks and Purples - 'Life in The Void' (Official Video) PUBLISHED THE 2ND LP (TO LISTEN TO) I HOPE IT'S AT LEAST ON PAR WITH THE PREVIOUS ONE, AMONG THE BEST OF THE YEAR