Horace Silver - The Risin' Sun

#unochesiannoiavapoco
a semi-serious journey through the discography and collaborations of Billy Cobham in almost chronological order
1969 Horace Silver - You Gotta Take a Little Love
 
EDDA OLLARI - L'ORA GIUSTA (1971)
Lorenza Visconti - L'ora giusta (Conti-Pace-Panzeri-Argenio)

#sanremo50annifa
sanremo 1971
hosted by Carlo Giuffrè and Elsa Martinelli
24 entries in competition
FORMULA: 2 performances per song, 14 songs in the final night
by Conte, Pace, Panzeri, Argenio
THE RIGHT TIME
sung by Edda Ollari and Lorenza Visconti
ELIMINATED!!
 
Arild Andersen / Shimri

Arild Andersen - from "Shimri"
1977 (ECM)

#jazzlegends
 
Frank Zappa - Drowning Witch

Frank Zappa (50 out of 100)
"Drowning Witch" - from "Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch"
(1982)

#tengonaminchiatanta
 
Rules of the Game Trailer (Jean Renoir, 1939)

Jean Renoir (1 of 4)
"The Rules of the Game" - (1939)

#35mm
 
Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Glorified Magnified
This means going beyond White Noise and the United States of America, since we are in the USA...
 
Genova 2011 Analisi di un processo - De Ferrari Editore
I would like to point out a truly illuminating pamphlet, which demonstrates - through the perspective of a non-lawyer and, therefore, not through the decrepit language used by those who study law - the dynamics of the criminal trial. The story is provocative, and the critique of the process is sharp. I would love to write a review about it, but for now, both energy and motivation are lacking.
 
Blu Notte - Paolo Conte
The Count in 100 songs.
49. Blue Night.
 
"Don't Box Me In" Stan Ridgway & Stewart Copeland

Whoever gets boxed in....
Is lost.
 
Genova per noi
The Count in 100 songs.
50. Genoa for us.
 
MR. G KNEW IT ALL...

A journey through Gaber's work, between his prophecies/dystopias that sometimes unsettlingly came true and the sideways visions of our lives, filled with daily habits and tics, miseries and aspirations, the political and the personal. We take him from the beginning of the second part of his career, the one in which, in different times, he brought the texts, his own and those of Sandro Luporini, on interminable theatrical tours throughout Italy, where even the audience participated as was common then, standing up and voicing their opinions, even in open opposition to the artist who would respond, sometimes emerging battered, sometimes not. Nowadays, it would be preferred to give him a like on Feisbucc or become one of his haters, as it seems no one expresses anything in public anymore, limiting themselves to hiding behind a nickname or a pseudonym. Sometimes I find myself wondering what he would think about this or that event; indeed, sometimes I would be curious to know, just...

Giorgio Gaber - Polli d'allevamento (6 - CD2)

Dedicated with fierce polemic to the youth, both alternative and mainstream, of the late '70s. This song also cost him insults, shoves, and spits from some young people, both on the street and in the theater... In fact, especially at the end of the piece, he wasn't exactly lighthearted...

"Dear dear farmed chickens, who now hate out of frustration and not by choice, with that ambiguous and increasingly twisted expression, imagining that passing by you in a dimly lit street, one could not know whether to expect a smile or a stab....
In this your jumbled life that seems like a tail of a cut lizard, you agitate involuntarily, continuing to scream, until the heart bursts, between such strong cheer and a lovely sense of death...."
 
Billy Idol - Sweet Sixteen
I’ve always wondered who the man is in the opening frames of Sweet Sixteen, captured among geometric blocks of stone.
My curiosity led me to investigate, uncovering a tear-jerking story.

The site is called Coral Castle and it is an architectural structure made of limestone designed in Homestead, Florida, by Edward Leedskalnin (the man in the frame), a Latvian-American amateur sculptor. The structure consists of large stone blocks shaped and carved into walls, large tables and chairs, bas-reliefs, and a habitable tower. Since 1984, it has been a monument included in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

According to Joe Bullard's biography, at the age of 26, Leedskalnin was left by his 16-year-old fiancée Agnes Scuff the day before their wedding. Out of disappointment, the young Latvian supposedly conceived the idea of building a castle to impress his beloved, a goal later achieved with the construction of Coral Castle, but which didn’t yield the desired success with the woman.

Sweet Sixteen, the video of which was filmed at Coral Castle, is directly inspired by the relationship between the sculptor and Agnes Scuff, whom he called Sweet Sixteen, which was the basis for the creation of the work.

These are some details taken from Wikipedia, but I highly recommend reading the full entries on the following pages:
Coral Castle - Wikipedia
Edward Leedskalnin - Wikipedia
 
Manfred Mann's Earth Band - Earth Hymn, Pt. 2
Here they seem like Le Orme... and then the guitar of Manfred weaves goosebump-inducing harmonies!