EN/PT REVIEW:
My favorite album of all time. The first and greatest of its genre.
In the Court of the Crimson King is ground zero for what we call progressive rock, also popularly known as the best rock subgenre. With a heavy jazz influence, King Crimson revolutionizes music in this work, pairing immortal songs with improvisations so well-crafted that they feel like a conversation between the instruments.
The album kicks off with one of the best songs in the band's history. It starts ... read more
A true poet and honest person.
This album may not contain the best songs in her career, but it certainly has the deepest and most introspective reflections. I don't consider this to be a rap or a neo-soul album; for me, this is a type of meditation, a conversation with a psychologist, where you are the psychologist, listening through all the stories, reflections, and doubts about the future, religion, justice, and more that Lauryn has to say, which you gotta reflect with that and put ... read more
The most overlooked 90s rap album of all time.
Stress, the second O.K. album, is the kind of thing you don't see every day, maybe even every decade. Marked by the great flows of Pharoahe Monch, the project is a true bomb, with countless wise bars that fluctuate between aggressiveness and expressiveness.
Obviously, here on AOTY, you will see such a high average rating because we are talking about an awesome album, but if you search the biggest music magazines on the internet, almost none ... read more