In My Time of Dying (1990 Remaster)

I see Vecchioni "review of the moment" if I'm not mistaken...
Debaser is dead...
@[sfascia carrozze], Brother... you can close up shop...
 
...and there was always that one who never got lucky, and so at the parties, in the secret hope of making something happen, he would bring along some records of Fausto Papetti because during the slow songs #maybe he could have a shot. Always ready to seize those elusive moments of collective distraction after spotting the unsuspecting girl of the moment, he would gather his courage and say: "Come on, let's put on some Papetti!"

B-191 Fausto Papetti [Best Collection 01] - Repack
 
Magdalena '93

Journey "The Nomads" between originals and covers, all sublime (20)
 
Elvis Presley "Don't Be Cruel" (January 6, 1957) on The Ed Sullivan Show

#edsullivanshow

From 1948 to 1971, every Sunday evening Ed Sullivan hosted the greatest and most famous artists on his show, broadcast on CBS. About ten years ago, it was released again in 12 DVDs, and an Italian newspaper published the best performances. I'm sharing them with you; there are truly marvelous things here.
 
Three Lions (Football's Coming Home) (Official Video)
We still believe football's coming home again 🏴
 
Kicking up a Racket
Ten little stiff fingers. Minimal series over two years with the Stiff Little Fingers (9)
 
CLAUDIA VEGLIANTE - Camomilla (1982) [HQ-Audio]

at 8 o'clock sharp Chamomile for breakfast

#ournewmonsters of Sunday
 
Miles Davis - So What (Audio)

Miles Davis (12 of 30)
"So What" - from: Kind of Blue
1959 (Columbia)

#jazzlegends
 
Would you like to try something new?
A tour (necessarily not exhaustive) of the extraordinary Neapolitan musical heritage.
10 Marcia delle Truppe Sanfediste Tarantelle alla napoletana par Marco Beasley et Accordone
"Your Claudio has fled, Messalina trembles"… Was the people obliged to know Roman history to understand their happiness?" (V. Cuoco)
In Naples, at the Museo di San Martino, there is a painting depicting Admiral Caracciolo hanged from the main mast of Nelson's ship. My father used to take me there often and tried to tell me about the Neapolitan Republic and the sanfedisti, about Pimentel Fonseca and the French who bombarded the very people they had come to liberate.
I understood nothing and I can barely remember his stories.
I learned about those things later, and also the words of Vincenzo Cuoco, who explained that a people's revolution is made "with" the people and not against them.
On June 13, 1799, Cardinal Ruffo, at the head of his Army of the Holy Faith in Our Lord Jesus Christ (the Sanfedisti), entered Naples, putting an end to the republican affair and beginning a bloody repression.
All of it with popular acclaim.
"The March of the Sanfedist Troops" is the most famous anti-Jacobin song born in those days; an incredibly famous song with countless versions (as usual, there's even that of the NCCP).
I propose to you this one by Marco Beasley and Accordone which is my favorite. Beasley and Accordone are extraordinary interpreters of Baroque music, scholars of "recitar cantando" and of Neapolitan and European Baroque, creators of magnificent shows. If you feel like it, get their "Storie di Napoli," which - I assure you - is a beautiful album; one of the best-kept secrets of a musical heritage buried under the usual pile of useless music.
 
Prince Paul - Handle Your Time I've always felt like Xzibit was Bud Spencer and Sadat X was Terence Hill. It gets much better.
 
Bill Haley & His Comets "Rock Around The Clock" on The Ed Sullivan Show

#edsullivanshow

From 1948 to 1971, every Sunday night Ed Sullivan hosted the biggest and most famous artists on his show, aired on CBS. About ten years ago, re-released on 12 DVDs, an Italian newspaper published the best performances. Here they are again, there are truly wonderful things.