Survivor - I'm Not That Man Anymore But what composition is this?! Total.
 
Ingrandisci questa immagine
TOP(PA) 100
That is, one hundred episodes eavesdropped beyond the door!

Episode [33]
Ready, set, spy!
 
Paul Rodgers & Nils Lofgren - Abandoned Love Paul Rodgers: 70 years old and still has a top-notch voice. As our Noble @[IlConte] would say... damn!!
 
Nick Drake - Which Will I had never listened to it, anyway. #zublime
 
Since Prof. @[lector] pulled me into this (and given that he must be a bit down due to some sad keyboard granfelinism saga...) Not having any particular or surprising ideas (I never have particular or surprising ideas, I'm often told that, alas...), I’m posting solo albums from artists who have done something as a group but have achieved less than they deserved as solo acts (pt. 6)
Can't Buy A Break
 
April Wine - Marjorie What a wonder is this?!
 
Antonello Venditti - Prendilo Tu Questo Frutto Amaro

Little Steven - Bitter Fruit - 1987

This time #iladri are Italian, or rather to be more precise "is Italian," and not just any Italian, but a singer-songwriter of quite a considerable level, namely the seventy-year-old Antonio Venditti better known as Antonello, the only son of a man from Campobasso in Molise who became vice-prefect of Rome and a professor of Latin and Greek, but that’s another story…

His name would be Steven Lento, but we used to know him first as Little Steven (when he was with the Boss's E Street Band) and then as Steven Van Zandt, but also jokingly with the nickname Miami Steve due to his aversion to cold weather.

Of Italian-American descent, Steve, whose grandfather was from Calabria, Lamezia Terme, while his grandmother’s parents were Neapolitan, was Cheyenne on his mother’s side, augh!

This "Bitter Fruit" from '87 was covered by Antonello in '95 and features Steven in the Spanish version from '97 titled "Cómte Tu Este Fruto Amargo" and nothing as usual…
 
Rodrigo - Concierto de Aranjuez for Guitar and Orchestra: 2. Adagio
A wonderful piece, written by someone who became blind at the age of 3 and managed to develop such a finely tuned sensitivity that translates into all this grace.
It seems to me that De André in "Tutti morimmo a stento" drew inspiration from it (see first notes).