01 - The M-80's - In A Fury - My Hands Are Tied

You've Been Told - The M 80s

During a remarkable period of "welcome back pipes" - I admit I was feeling out of it - I listened to, (re)discovered garage bands full of soul and blood, with, as usual, diverse influences ranging from beat to punk, from psychedelia to R&B - from power pop to folk, from rockabilly to mod, even soul and even hard rock. In short, the essence of rock 'n' roll from true beasts to the wild scream of "fuck your virtuosic and super fast scales and your fucking 4-octave vocal range." Since 1990 onward, with some revivals of old geezers, savansadir.

#garagedintorni (72)

So since I consider them among the ABSOLUTE BEST and LEAST OVERLOOKED (in my opinion, there’s only one chapter of the Reverend, I’ve never read anything else)... here at the very least I'm putting “THE TRUCK DRIVER” (and the big horse) on the line, I say this especially for the Noble @[macmaranza] who was eagerly waiting. This is the amazing debut, and today, what we have - all wonderful - is to be listened to.
 
China Crisis - The Soul Awakening
Have you ever wanted to freeze a moment and stay in that dimension forever? Like today: early October, sun, lake.
 
link rotto
The Carruzzelli brothers quickly handle this at home🤣🤣
 
Louise

#dedicatedto
 
Mulholland Drive - Diner Scene

"Mulholland Dr."
by David Lynch (2001)

starring Naomi Watts
Laura Harring
and Justin Theroux

#35mm
 
Billie's Bounce (Live At The Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles / 1957)

J.J. Johnson (4 out of 5)
"Billie's Bounce" from: Stan Getz and J.J. Johnson at the Opera House
1962 (Verve)

#jazzlegends
 
#BDMvsQuarantena 01 - LO SCHIACCIANOCI

uhm, dedicated to all the friends who have pressed them for me lately, enjoy it (the work I mean)
 
The Beach Boys - 'Til I Die
Every now and then I pick up a book that back in the first year of high school made you go down hard with a funnel, I don't even know why I do it: curiosity to see the effect they have at a time when everything seems pointless? Masochism? A challenge with myself? Who knows...
Anyway, I recently reread I Malavoglia, which at the time left me with the strongest sense of “struggle” and “grayness.” A feeling so intense that, for years, just seeing the green spine of the Garzanti edition stacked in the bookshelf would bring back those sensations and I'd steer clear.
Well, I was astonished to find myself captivated by the story, unable to wait for a moment of free time to continue reading.
Perhaps every reading must be approached at the right time, but I also feel like saying that there was something wrong at the time in the way students were introduced to these books.
Listening to it published without thinking too much, for no particular reason, just a reflection.
A song that has nothing to do with it, but conveys well my feelings from the last part of the reading.