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Lucio Dalla: The Astronaut Who Played Clarinet in the Alley

Lucio Dalla looked like your eccentric uncle—the one who reads Rimbaud in dialect and believes jellyfish are psychic. He wore fisherman’s caps and round glasses like he was both blind prophet and jazz pirate. But behind that disarming appearance was one of Italy’s most unclassifiable musical minds: part chanson, part prog, part street ballad, part prayer. He didn’t write songs. He built them like strange, little cities—populated with time travelers, […]

todayJuly 10, 2025 4

Folk

John Fahey

from John Fahey Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More ... | AllMusic   Born John Aloysius Fahey on Feb 28, 1939 in Takoma Park, MD.  Died Feb 22, 2001 in Salem, OR. One of acoustic music's true innovators and eccentrics, John Fahey was a crucial figure in expanding the boundaries of the acoustic guitar over the last few decades. His music was so eclectic that it's arguable whether he should […]

todayJuly 9, 2025 11 2

Jazz

Keith Jarrett: The Man Who Argued with Silence

If Keith Jarrett were a tree, he’d be a temperamental oak in a jazz forest, growling at birds for landing on his branches out of rhythm. There’s a reason his name triggers both awe and exasperation among music lovers. He is, after all, the pianist who once stopped a concert because someone in the audience coughed too much. Not as a joke. Not as protest. As a principle. Because when […]

todayJuly 9, 2025 7 2

Uncategorized

99 Posse: Napoli’s Radical Rhythms and Revolutionary Riddims

When you talk about Italian music with a conscience—no, scratch that—with a bullhorn and a Molotov cocktail—you eventually end up in the defiant company of 99 Posse. Formed in Naples in 1991, this band of misfits, militants, and musical experimenters were never content with just dropping beats; they dropped manifestos. Birth of a Posse 99 Posse emerged from the same cultural petri dish that birthed centri sociali, squatted spaces teeming […]

todayJune 24, 2025 7

Ambient

Haruomi Hosono: The Eternal Tourist in a Synthesized World

There are musicians who chase the zeitgeist, and then there’s Haruomi Hosono, who gently taps it on the shoulder, hands it a tropical drink, and invites it to dance to a steel drum inside a spaceship. If you’ve ever stumbled upon a 1970s Japanese album cover that looks like it belongs to a Hawaiian lounge band made entirely of aliens, congratulations—you may have entered the sonic Bermuda Triangle that is […]

todayJune 23, 2025 8

Punk

CCCP Fedeli alla Linea: Punk Liturgies in the People’s Disco

If punk ever took communion in a red banner-lit chapel while screaming about factory alienation and grilled sausages, it would sound like CCCP Fedeli alla Linea. Forget what you know about punk. This wasn't three-chord rebellion in a dingy London pub. CCCP was a performance-art ritual, a dadaist cabaret dressed in Red Army drag, a sonic riot happening simultaneously in Reggio Emilia, Kabul, and a crumbling Catholic cathedral. Their name […]

todayJune 22, 2025 171 2

General

Mina: The Voice That Disappeared but Never Left

If the gods of pop decided to whisper secrets into human ears, they’d probably sound a bit like Mina. To call Mina just a singer is like calling the Colosseum just a pile of rocks. This woman didn't just dominate the Italian charts for decades—she redefined what it meant to have a voice, a face, and then, gloriously, no face at all. That’s right. In 1978, she walked away from […]

todayJune 21, 2025 6 3

Ambient

The Holy Minimalist: Emahoy Tsege Mariam Gebru and the Sound of Sacred Solitude

In a world that rewards noise, speed, and spectacle, the music of Emahoy Tsege Mariam Gebru arrives like morning fog drifting through a sunlit chapel—gentle, quiet, and utterly unbothered by the demands of modern life. A classically trained pianist turned Ethiopian Orthodox nun, Emahoy’s life is a journey through war, exile, silence, and spiritual transcendence. Her compositions, mostly written in solitude and humility, feel like whispered conversations with the eternal. […]

todayJune 20, 2025 9 1 2

General

Carol Kaye Said No—And Rock ‘n’ Roll Might Finally Deserve It

Some legends wear leather. Some wield Stratocasters like swords. And some—like Carol Kaye—lay down the bottom-end thunder of an entire generation while looking like your friend’s unassuming cool aunt who happens to know exactly where the beat belongs. Carol Kaye, the bass-playing polymath behind hundreds of your favorite songs (even if you don't know it), reportedly turned down an invitation to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of […]

todayJune 20, 2025 7 1 2

Avant-Garde Jazz

William Parker: The Sonic Shaman of Free Jazz

If jazz is a galaxy, William Parker is its rogue comet—blazing, untethered, radiant with centuries of ancestral fire and a homemade bow on a one-stringed bass. You don’t just listen to William Parker; you fall into a trance, wake up somewhere in a Brooklyn loft circa 1982, and realize you’ve just witnessed a séance conducted entirely through upright bass, pocket trumpet, and spontaneous human combustion. For the uninitiated, William Parker […]

todayJune 19, 2025 5 2

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