Greatest solos in history... The Electric Prunes - Holy Are You
 
 
King Crimson - The Letters - Marquee (1971) SBD Unfortunately, the original doesn't have such a devilish sax solo. I'm sorry "Islands," but this one grabbed me right away. (From the studio version, I love that scream from Fripp before the break with the smoky sax and toms.)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Josef K- Sorry For Laughing Who's looking for the Strokes?
 
 
 
 
'We, today's guys' (48) Bonde das Maravilhas - Evolução das Maravilhas (KondZilla)
Group evolutions and variations on the theme.
 
 
HELTER SKELTER THE BEATLES NO COVER VIDEO ORIGINAL
They were looking for a brutality that would surpass "My Generation" and ended up inspiring Charles Manson.
 
 
Codeine - D A rather dull Sunday
 
 
Bryan Ferry Limbo
Gnokkume a gogo
 
 
The Doors - Rock is dead / Live studio record
"Jim Morrison & the Doors on the Road" (65)
Session 69, which was left out of the official discography but not from the live shows.
In the studio in the photo with Jim, Mark Brenno.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Genesis - One for the Vine I'm in the midst of my Wind & Wuthering phase...
 
 
 
 
The Tree - No Good Woman
What Pebbles/Nuggets (3)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Lyrics - So What !! - Garage 45
What Pebbles/Nuggets (2)
 
 
"I want to live like this, with the sun on my face and happily listening... listening for myself!" In other words, I just do whatever the fuck I want (and, most importantly, what I like) (26)
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is? (50th Anniversary Remix)
 
 
1967-2017 Fifty years and not feeling it (57)... Vanilla Fudge - Vanilla Fudge [Full Album]
 
 
 
 
Joni Mitchell - Refuge Of The Roads After years of listening, it remains one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard.
 
 
I am not listening, I haven't listened, after a year, not even a note from Capossela's album. He won’t hold it against me. I've also seen two of his concerts: the one for Ovunque proteggi, probably the peak of his career, then the one with the clowns, the circus, and the antics. Whales, saints, leviathans, and navigators—I said goodbye to Capossela. Who knows: it may have been a great listen, Capossela's album of which I know nothing, but as (perhaps) Sicilo wrote (perhaps) to Euterpe (perhaps), on a stele, "Life is short. Time demands its tribute." And I had to catch up on the discography of This Heat Musica Antica Grecia - - Stele di Sicilo.
 
 
 
 
10 Magnificent Losers. 10 Stories That Should Be Told. 10) Pete Best MONEY (1962) by the Beatles with Pete Best
10 is really a few, too many have been left out. It would have been few even if there had been 100. But even if there had been 100, the number 1 would always have been him: the forgotten Beatle. Even Stu Sutcliffe is more famous than him; but Stu was an artist and died young and beautiful. Not him, he clocked in for almost thirty years at his office. He was, throughout his life, just Randolph Peter Scanland, a middling figure in the English job market.
What must it have meant to be a Beatle without anyone knowing? And without ever really understanding why he was kicked out.
Yet his mother Mona was important for the early days of the Beatles, and he had his own following. Girls liked him, many came for him; at some concerts, the drums were placed in front of the others so that Pete could be seen better. They called him "Atom Beat."
Then that was it; he tried for a while. "Lee Curtis & The All Stars," the "Pete Best Four," the "Pete Best Combo." But nothing: nobody cared. He wouldn't pick up the drums again until the '90s, after retiring early. There would be those who would flock to see the "ex-Beatle" play.
But this story, unlike the others, doesn't end badly: after the release of "Anthology 1" with some unreleased tracks featuring him on drums, he reportedly pocketed about 8 million dollars.
Oh, and he even buried two Beatles...
In short, this series has a happy ending too.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Who - Quadrophenia Masterful finale
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ruth Copeland - The Medal [1971]
"Your piece of gold cannot replace my man"