Los discos favoritos de...

Iniciado por No-soy-Gilles, Febrero 27, 2008, 08:57:31 PM

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No-soy-Gilles

John Coxon (Spring Heel Jack)
Otis Redding Otis Blue
Nicolette Now Is Early
Can Ege Bamyasi
Peter Brotzmann Octet Machine Gun
Arvo Part Tabula Rasa
Olivier Messiaen Visions de L'Amen
Miles Davis Big Fun
Sibelius The Swan of Tuonela/Symphony No.9
Sly & The Family Stone There's A Riot Going On
Funkadelic Maggot Brain

Kevin Coyne
Robert Johnson King Of The Delta Blues Singers
Little Richard Greatest Hits
Elvis Presley The King Of Rock 'N' Roll
Chuck Berry The Chess Box
The Doo Wop Box: A Collection Of Vocal Group Records From The Fifties
John Lee Hooker House Of The Blues
Charlie Parker Parker's Moods
Kevin Ayers Singing The Bruise (BBC Recordings)
Captain Beefheart Shiny Beast
George Formby 24 Family Favourites

Holger Czukay (Can)
Brian Eno Apollo
Public Image Limited Metal Box
Bach Musical Offering
Schubert String Quartets
Jimi Hendrix Axis: Bold As Love
James Brown (anything/everything)
Stockhausen Gesang der Jí¼nglinge
The Beatles "I Am The Walrus"
Philip Glass Koyaanisqatsi
The Velvet Underground And Nico

John Fahey
Mazzy Star So Tonight That I Might See
Stanley Brothers Earliest Recordings
American Primitive Vol. 1: Raw Pre-War Gospel

Jad Fair (Half Japanese)
Captain Beefheart Trout Mask Replica
The Modern Lovers The Modern Lovers
The Shaggs Philosophy of the World
The Stooges The Stooges
The Velvet Underground and Nico
The Rolling Stones The Rolling Stones

Mick Farren
Bob Dylan Blonde On Blonde
Rolling Stones Exile On Main Street
Elvis Presley Rock & Roll # 1
Jimi Hendrix Electric Ladyland
William S. Burroughs Call Me Burroughs

Andy Gill (Gang of Four)
Muddy Waters Best of
Jimi Hendrix Electric Ladyland, Band of Gypsys (it's got a straight funk thing on it)
The Velvet Underground and Nico (though there's some other great VU things)
The Band The Band, Music From Big Pink (they're really great songs, so accomplished and they're singing about stuff that nobody else sang about)
Bob Dylan Nashville Skyline
Bjork Homogenic, Telegram
David Bowie Young Americans

David Grubbs (Gastr Del Sol, Red Krayola)
Mayo Thompson Corky's Debt to His Father
Blind Willie Johnson "Praise God I'm Satisfied"
Bob Dylan "I Want You"
Van Dyke Parks Song Cycle
Luc Ferrari Presque Rien No. 1
Pablo Casals' recordings of Bach's "Cello Suites"
Glenn Gould's final recording of Bach's "Goldberg Variations"
Duke Ellington "Solitude" (from Indigos)
The Beach Boys Pet Sounds
Derek Bailey Aida

Afrika Bambaataa
James Brown Revolution of the Mind- Live At the Apollo, Volume 3
Sly and the Family Stone Stand, Greatest Hits
Marvin Gaye What's Going On
Curtis Mayfield Curtis Live
The Rolling Stones Greatest Hits
Public Enemy It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back
Gary Newman "Cars"

Ron Asheton (The Stooges)
Pharoah Sanders Upper Egypt
John Coltrane Cosmic Music
Jimi Hendrix Are You Experienced?
Rolling Stones Aftermath
The Doors The Doors

Blixa Bargeld (Einstí¼rzende Neubauten)
Neu! Neu!
Can Tago Mago
Velvet Underground
Exuma the Obeah Man
Les Maitres-Tambours du Burundi (French recording of the original Burundi drumming)
Pete Seeger "The Goofing Off Suite" (my favorite record of all time)

Lou Barlow (Sebadoh)
Black Sabbath Masters of Reality
Nuggets
Pebbles
Back From the Grave
Byrds Younger Than Yesterday

The Bats (Robert Scott)
Wire Pink Flag
The Stranglers No More Heroes
Television Marquee Moon
Velvet Underground White Light/White Heat
Harmonia Musik Von Harmonia
Kate Bush The Kick Inside
Bert Jansch Jack Orion
Nic Jones Penguin Eggs
Suicide 1st lp
Amon Duul II Yeti

David Behrman
Henry Cowell "The United Quartet"
Jean Sibelius "Symphony no.4"
Morton Feldman "The Turfan Fragments" performed by the SEM Orchestra
Bob Ashley "Private Parts" performed by "Blue" Gene Tyranny
Igor Stravinsky "Symphonies of Winds"
Lois V Vierk "Red Shift"
Maggi Payne "Lunar Earthrise"
Yuji Takahashi "The Wind is Calling me Outside", performed by Kazue Sawai
Phill Niblock "Five more String Quartets" performed by the Soldier Quartet

Tim Berne
Julius Hemphill Dogon A.D.
George Russell The Jazz Workshop
Lutoslawski 'Cello Concerto'
Sonny Rollins What's New
Miles Davis anything from the '60's (esp. Miles Smiles with 'Freedom Jazz Dance')
Anthony Braxton
Aretha Franklin I Never Loved A Man The Way I Loved You

Joe Baiza (Saccharine Trust)
James Blood Ulmer Freelancing
Television Marquee Moon
The Meters Second Line Strut
Charlie Parker Savoy and Dial recordings
Gang of Four Entertainment
Pat Martino Baiyina (The Clear Evidence)
Sergei Rachmaninoff “Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff
Charles Mingus Mingus at Antibes
Walter Wanderley Rain Forest
The Fall Live at the Witch Trails

Keith Brammer (Die Kreuzen)
The Stooges Funhouse
Isaac Hayes Hot Buttered Soul
Eno Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy)
Kiss Alive!
Ramones Ramones
John Coltrane The Complete 1961 Village Vanguard Recordings
Primal Scream Screamadelica
The Rolling Stones Exile on Main Street
The Birthday Party Junkyard
Simon & Garfunkel Collected Works

Nick Cain (Oppobrium)
Pere Ubu The Modern Dance
Robert Wyatt Rock Bottom
The Dead C. Harsh 70s Reality
Alastair Galbraith Morse
Can Future Days
John Coltrane Meditations
Sonic Youth Bad Moon Rising
Borbetomagus New York Performances
Spontaneous Music Ensemble Karyobin
Frank Lowe Black Beings

Robert Christgau
Thelonious Monk Mysterioso
The Clash The Clash
New York Dolls New York Dolls
Steely Dan Pretzel Logic
Indestructible Beat of Soweto
The Rolling Stones Now!
The Beatles The Beatles Second Album
Debarge In A Special Way
Funky Four Plus One "That's The Joint"
Afrika Bambaataa "Zulu Nation Throw Down"
T.S. Monk "Bon Bon Vie"

Emma Bunton
1. Sticky Fingers The Rolling Stones
2. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles
3. Club Classics Vol I Soul Ii Soul
4. Affection Lisa Stansfield
5. Songs From The Big Chair Tears For Fears
6. Diva Annie Lennox
7. Regatta De Blanc The Police
8. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road Elton John
9. Fantastic Wham!
10. Welcome To The Beautiful South The Beautiful South

Mick Jones Of The Clash

1. Sunny Afternoon The Kinks
2. I-Wah-Dub Dennis 'Blackbeard' Bovell
3. The Winkies The Winkies
4. Disraeli Gears Cream
5. Wildlife Mott The Hoople
6. Exile On Main St The Rolling Stones
7. Magical Mystery Tour The Beatles
8. Smash Hits Jimi Hendrix Experience*
9. Who's Next The Who
10. The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars David Bowie

(*Mick Jones Argues: 'Not Strictly British But We Kinda Claimed Him As Our Own.')

James Dean Bradfield Of The Manic Street Preachers

1. I Am A Wallet McCarthy
2. Rattlesnakes Lloyd Cole And The Commotions
3. Empires And Dance Simple Minds
4. 8 Million Stories June Brides
5. Scared To Dance The Skids
6. Seventeen Seconds The Cure
7. No Dice Badfinger
8. Setting Sons The Jam
9. Rigour '83-'86 Big Flame
10. Bummed Happy Mondays

Robert Del Naja

1. Abbey Road The Beatles
2. Metal Box Pil
3. The Clash The Clash
4. Screamadelica Primal Scream
5. Spirit Of Eden Talk Talk
6. Ok Computer Radiohead
7. Meddle Pink Floyd
8. The Pretty Things The Pretty Things
9. Club Classics Vol. 1 Soul II Soul
10. Dirk Wears White Sox Adam And The Ants

Tony Parsons, novelist

1. Every Picture Tells A Story Rod Stewart
2. The Stone Roses The Stone Roses
3. The Clash The Clash
4. Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake Small Faces
5. Some Girls The Rolling Stones
6. Hatful Of Hollow The Smiths
7. Meet Danny Wilson Danny Wilson
8. Definitely Maybe Oasis
9. Station To Station David Bowie
10. Who's Next The Who

Tim Burgess Of The Charlatans

1. Something Else The Kinks
2. All Mod Cons The Jam
3. Bummed Happy Mondays
4. Power, Corruption And Lies New Order
5. Searching For The Young Soul Rebels Dexy's Midnight Runners
6. London Calling The Clash
7. Ogdens' Nut Gone Flake The Small Faces
8. Hard Nose The Highway Van Morrison
9. The Queen Is Dead The Smiths
10. Exile On Main Street The Rolling Stones

Trevor Horn

1. With The Beatles The Beatles
2. Year Of The Cat Al Stewart
3. The Yes Album Yes
4. Sheet Music 10cc
5. Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin Iv
6. Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy Elton John
7. Hunky Dory David Bowie
8. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles
9. Dark Side Of The Moon Pink Floyd
10. Help The Beatles

Nitin Sawhney

1. Mustt Mustt Michael Brooke And Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
2. Physical Grafitti Led Zeppelin
3. 4 Hero Two Pages
4. Massive Attack Protection
5. Dummy Portishead
6. Road To Freedom Young Disciples
7. OK Computer Radiohead
8. Urban Hymns The Verve
9. Original Pirate Material The Streets
10. Parachutes Coldplay

Ozzy Osbourne

1. Revolver The Beatles
2. Sgt Peppers The Beatles
3. Band On The Run Paul McCartney
4. So Peter Gabriel
5. Dark Side Of The Moon Pink Floyd
6. Abbey Road The Beatles
7. Imagine John Lennon
8. Blizzard Of Ozz Ozzy Osbourne/Randy Rhoads
9. Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin
10. Machine Head Deep Purple

Phil Manzanera Of Roxy Music

1. Sgt Pepper The Beatles
2. Exile On Main St The Rolling Stones
3. Dark Side Of The Moon Pink Floyd
4. Led Zeppelin Ii Led Zeppelin
5. The Bends Radiohead
6. Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars David Bowie
7. For Your Pleasure Roxy Music
8. Imagine John Lennon
9. Pulp Different Class
10. Robert Wyatt Schleep

Stuart Murdoch Of Belle And Sebastian

1. Poem Of The River Felt
2. Victorialand Cocteau Twins
3. Forever Breathes The Lonely Word Felt
4. You Can't Hide Your Love Forever Orange Juice
5. London Calling The Clash
6. The Smiths The Smiths
7. The Specials The Specials
8. Y The Pop Group
9. The Raincoats The Raincoats
10. Colossal Youth Young Marble Giants

The OMM Team

1. Sticky Fingers The Rolling Stones
2. The Stone Roses The Stone Roses
3. Astral Weeks Van Morrison
4. Blue Lines Massive Attack
5. Screamadelica Primal Scream
6. London Calling The Clash
7. Revolver The Beatles
8. Original Pirate Material The Streets
9. Loveless My Bloody Valentine
10. The White Album The Beatles

Brian May

1. Abbey Road The Beatles
2. Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin
3. Fire And Water Free
4. Temperance Seven Temperance Seven
5. Gloriana - The C0urtly Dances Julian Bream
6. Blues Breakers John Mayall With Eric Clapton
7. Truth Jeff Beck
8. Black Sabbath Black Sabbath
9. It's All About Spooky Tooth
10. Mott Mott The Hoople

Will Young

1. Love &Amp; Affection Joan Armatrading
2. Be Yourself Tonight Eurythmics
3. Stronger Than Pride Sade
4. Abbey Road The Beatles
5. Sticky Fingers Rolling Stones
6. Let's Dance David Bowie
7. Blue Lines Massive Attack
8. Staring At The Sea: The Singles The Cure
9. The Stone Roses The Stone Roses
10. Echoes: The Best Of Pink Floyd Pink Floyd

Justin Hawkins Of The Darkness

1. Jazz Queen
2. Led Zeppelin I,II, III, IV Or Houses Of The Holy Led Zeppelin
3. Rumours Fleetwood Mac*
4. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road Elton John
5. Dark Side Of The Moon Pink Floyd
6. Exile On Main Street Rolling Stones
7. 4 Foreigner**
8. Powerage Ac/Dc***
9. Anything By The Beatles
10. Moog Dick Hyman

* Justin Argues: 'Half Of Fleetwood Mac Are English.' ** 'Half Of Foreigner Are English.' ***'Ac/Dc Have A Scottish Contingent.' )

Pete Tong

1. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles
2. Dark Side Of The Moon Pink Floyd
3. Beggar's Banquet The Rolling Stones
4. Astral Weeks Van Morrison
5. Aladdin Sane David Bowie
6. Electric Warrior T.Rex
7. Substance New Order
8. Blue Lines Massive Attack
9. London Calling The Clash
10. Timeless Goldie

Rick Wakeman Of Yes

1. Shades Of Deep Purple Deep Purple
2. Hinky Dory David Bowie
3. The Dream Of The Blue Turtles Sting
4. Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin
5. Ozzmosis Ozzy Osbourne
6. In The Court of The Crimson King King Crimson
7. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles
8. The Age Of Plastic Buggles
9. The Wall Pink Floyd
10. Hedja Hedja


Terry Hall Of The Specials

1. Young Americans David Bowie
2. The Clash The Clash
3. Roxy Music Roxy Music
4. White Music XTC
5. Greatest Hits David Essex
6. Parklife Blur
7. Songs From the Bathtub Vol 1Pete Boyle
8. Sheet Music 10cc
9. Modern Music Be Bop Deluxe
10. Pin Ups David Bowie

Mike Skinner Of The Streets

1. Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band The Beatles
2. The Stone RosesThe Stone Roses
3. Boy In Da Corner Dizzee Rascal
4. Gangster Chronicles The London Posse
5. (What's The Story) Morning Glory Oasis
6. Original Pirate Material The Streets
7. Music For The Jilted Generation The Prodigy
8. Parachutes Coldplay
9. Dummy Portishead
10. The Queen Is Dead The Smiths


Morrissey

1. For Your Pleasure Roxy Music*
(*Morrissey claims he can only think of one truly great British album and that this is it)





No-soy-Gilles

Wayne Hussey(The Mission)

. Only the Lonely - Frank Sinatra
This is perhaps the ‘bluest’ album of all time. This album has seen me through some very desperate, long, and wine sodden nights. The singing is immaculate, as you would expect from the master. And the choice of song is perfect. For anybody that has ever loved and lost, and we all have, this is the perfect album. No matter how low you feel, this album will elevate you. It’s so melancholy.

2. Pet Sounds - The Beach Boys
Perhaps the antithesis of Frank’s album. This is joyeous and celebratory and magical. It’s an album written and recorded by young people for young people. This is all about the yearning and torture of first love. And it so beautifully captures it’s era, which was the mid 1960’s. And it includes one of the most fantastic love songs of all time in ‘God Only Knows’.

3. Plastic Ono Band
As raw and as painful as a fresh carpet burn.......No secret that Lennon was my ‘fave’ Beatle and probably my ‘fave’ all time voice. This is a brutally honest record, and a man that has balls enough to be so open and put himself on the line because of the love he feels for his partner, in this case Yoko, deserve’s nothing but our respect. I can identify.

4. Mezzanine - Massive Attack
Great sounds, great mood, great songs, and great singing and musicianship. I never get bored of hearing this album. It’s very dark but without being oppressive.
5. OK Computer - Radiohead
Probably the best band I’ve ever seen live, along with Queen circa 1975-6. Great guitar playing. I know Rich talked about John Bonham & John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin as the best rhythm section ever, and I won’t disagree with his assessment, but the rhythm section of Radiohead would surely give them a good run for their money. I like all their albums apart from the first one, but this is probably my favourite.

6. Ju-Ju - Siouxsie & The Banshees
Started listening to this again recently and it made me realise how big an influence this album, and John McGeoch’s guitar playing in particular, has been on me over the years. The Banshees, around this time, were mighty. Saw them live many times.

7. Fiona Apple - When The Pawn....
I don’t think she’s too widely known in the UK but she is fanatstic. Great songwriting and an amazing voice. One of my favourite voices. I first heard her on the radio whilst I was living in California and immediately phoned the radio station to find out who it was. Loved her ever since.
Unfortunely she too often gets put in the same category as Paula Cole and Sarah McLachan and suchlike female singer-songwriters, but she has more balls than LFC. Craig didn’t like her so he had to go!

8. Screamadelica - Primal Scream
Great drug journey album. ‘Higher Than The Sun’ is genius. This has been the soundtrack to many a good night, and early morning.

9. Diamond Dogs - David Bowie
Recommenced my love affair with Bowie again recently. I can’t really remember what the catalyst was but certainly a huge influence on EVERYBODY. Rich talked about The Beatles and the DNA of pop music and that’s a great theory, and I love the Beatles myself, but I think Bowie
has had just as big an influence. I love ALL of his 70’s stuff up to and including ‘Scary Monsters’, his 80’s stuff was pap though, Tin Machine were brave and ahead of their time, and then from ‘Outside’ onwards he’s made consistantly fine albums, but my favourite still is ‘Diamond Dogs’. Fantastic.

10. Electric Warrior - T.Rex
Once upon a time I wanted to be Kevin Keegan and play for Liverpool. Then one day I saw Marc Bolan and T.Rex on Top Of The Pops performing ‘Get It On’. That was it for me. My whole life changed from that moment onwards. I’d found my life’s calling, I’d found my true vocation. And to this day, and I can’t explain it, the opening guitar riff of ‘Get It On’ still sounds so sexually provocative to me. I remember when he died in 1977, I cried because it felt like my youth was over.
And, Marc Bolan had better hair than Kevin Keegan.

11. To Bring You My Love - PJ Harvey
I like PJ a lot. Her albums are consistantly good. And this is perhaps her darkest. I remember buying this whilst I was on tour with The Mission in 95 or 96 and the I remember the rest of the band hated it. It wasn’t AC/DC. And how can somebody so skinny have such a huge voice?

12. Crocodiles - Echo & The Bunnymen
I bought this fairly recently on CD, I only had it on vinyl before, and I’d forgotten how good this was. And, like the Banshee’s ‘Ju-Ju’, a huge influence on me, I think. I’ve never made a secret of the fact that I am a huge Will Sergeant (the Bunnyman’s guitar player) fan but I also think Mac owns one of the best rock voices of the last 25 years. And he’s a great lyricist too. Their first 2 or 3 albums were awesome. Should be where Depeche, The Cure, and even U2 are today.

And honourable mentions to:
Pornography - The Cure, Led Zeppelin IV, Hounds of Love - Kate Bush, the 2nd Sigur Roos album, and This Is The Sea - The Waterboys. The list could easily go on...........and I'm sure I've forgotten some 'classics' that should surely be included and the list bwould surely change on a daily basis........but for today, this is my top 12 albums.


Ian McLagan Small Faces

1. The Beatles: Rubber Soul
Though I'd heard the previous albums this was the first one I bought. 'Michelle' coincided with my first French shag, 'Norwegian Wood' takes me back to the panelled dining room at 22 Westmoreland Terrace where we lived in 1966, and it was such a great cover photograph. If you tilt the album cover and look at it from the bottom left corner the photograph isn't distorted.... Look, I had a lot of time on my hands that day and I was stoned, OK?

2. The Beatles: Revolver
Ronnie Lane was the first in the band to buy it and we listened to it over and over at his Earl's Court flat. Wonderful Klaus Voormann cover and I like the photograph on the back too. It looks as if the others are reacting to something funny that George has just said. I wonder what it could have been?

3. The Who: A Quick One
'Run Run Run' and 'Heatwave'. Brilliant. I'd seen them 'live' and needed the fix. Same with 'The Who Sell Out'.

4. Rolling Stones: Beggar's Banquet
This one was the best one up till then from the Stones, who had been my favourite 'live' band from the beginning. 'Sympathy For The Devil' And 'Street Fighting Man' are absolute classics.

5. Rolling Stones: Let It Bleed
They were really in their stride with this album. 'Monkey Man', 'Gimme Shelter', 'Country Honk' and 'Midnight Rambler' are brilliant, but I never liked 'You Can't Always Get What You Want', and wasn't surprised to learn that the great Al Kooper played organ and piano and arranged the choir separately from the Stones.

6. Free: Fire And Water
The songs were great, and each of them were exceptional players, and together they made classic records.

7.Rolling Stones: Some Girls
OK, so I've included one album that I actually played on. I'm on 'Miss You' and 'Imagination' but it was such a rebirth for the Stones and I don't think they've made a more consistent or better album since.

8.Elvis Costello: My Aim Is True
I still love 'Alison'. A very beautiful song.

9.Cimarons: Maka
I heard 'Truly' from this green vinyl album on the radio and had the devil of a job finding it. I played it for Keith Richards when I was touring with the New Barbarians and cut my version of it with Keith, Woody, Zigaboo Modeliste, Bobby and Daryl Keys and Stanley Clarke for my first album 'Troublemaker'. I eventually met Carl Levy, whose band it was when he was in L. A. promoting the album.

10. Ian Dury and the Blockheads: New Boots & Panties!!
I'd already moved to the States when they hit the streets with this, but I found it anyway. Then Ronnie Wood told me he'd spent a few mad evenings with Ian. The Shakespeare and Max Miller of Upminster

Mick Jones The Clash

1. Sunny Afternoon: The Kinks
On the budget priced Marble Arch Label. The title track is my favourite song ever.

2. I-Wah-Dub: Dennis 'Blackbeard' Bovell
One of the revolutionary producers finest moments along with the 'Babylon' soundtrack and 'Cut' by the Slits.

3. The Winkies: The Winkies
Produced by 'London Calling' producer Guy Stevens. This band was on the pub rock scene circa 1975. Cover by Hypnosis, they backed Eno around the time of 'Taking Tiger Mountain.'

4. Disraeli Gears: The Cream
The first record I bought with my own money. It was 32s 6d. 'My baby has gone down the plughole.'

5. Wildlife: Mott The Hoople
With some school friends I used to follow Mott around. We used to bunk the trains and then bunk into the gigs. When they got to know us a bit they used to let us all in and always treated us well.

6. Exile On Main Street: the Rolling Stones
'Sticky Fingers,' 'Get Your Ya Ya's Out,' 'Goatshead Soup,' 'Beggars Banquet,' 'Their Satanic Majesties,' 'Let It Bleed'...... it could have been any of these but for total absolute feel it has to be 'Exile.' Records used to come out on Thursdays so by the Saturday, if you were into a band, you knew all the tracks by heart.

7. Magical Mystery Tour: The Beatles
The same for the Beatles as the Stones - all of their albums are great but some are greater than others. This is a personal favourite of mine - it's such a mad project, some say folly, but what do they know. Double E.P. really.

8. Smash Hits: Jimi Hendrix
NOT STRICTLY BRITISH but we kinda claimed him as our own. Picasso with a guitar.

9. Who's Next - The Who
Many years ago Joe and I wrote this song - 'Tribute to Keith Moon.' And we sorta lost it in tribute to Keith Moon I suppose. This is greatness personified on a record.

10. Ziggy Stardust & The Spiders From Mars: Ziggy Stardust & the Spiders From Mars
It was like this is the concept, but to us. The band was really upset when Ziggy broke the band up.


11. The Libertines: The Libertines (the new one)
A future classic - believe. All time great.


javi

De todos los listados, tengo 31.

El resto no valen para mucho más.
Running is life. Anything before or after is just waiting