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Babylon Circus est de retour, et il faut dresser l'oreille. Il n'est pas question de changement, d'évolution, mais de véritable renaissance. Quand on a frôlé la mort de très près, on a forcément une autre vision de la vie, d'autres choses à raconter. Plus profondes, plus importantes. Et ça s'entend dès les premières notes du nouvel album, celui qui - on prend les paris ? - va offrir à ces flibustiers la reconnaissance massive qu'ils méritent !
About
The Alternate Reality of Babylon Circus: Russian Hospital Tourism, Dublin Police Chases, and Syrian Ska Dancing In Dances of Resistance carries a message of optimism in a world that offers little hope. In the style of musical warriors like The Clash and sonic rebels like Jimi Hendrix, Babylon Circus use the power of the microphone to address social and political issues, providing an alternative view of what the official line claims is our reality. But their music is also a call to put your wallflower days behind and join the dance. Lead singer David Baruchel says the music of Babylon Circus is a “way to fight, to be active in today's society rather than a victim”. Some describe Babylon Circus as the French version of Gogol Bordello, thanks to their sonic madness and stage antics. Their music is infused with touches of Django Reinhart, Balkan Gypsy music, and great French singers like Edith Piaf or Jacques Brell. Bob Marley is also inescapably present. Their eclectic fusion picks up where French alternative rock band Mano Negra left off, both bands touring extensively in their quest for social justice. Wherever they go Babylon Circus creates journalistic snapshots of life penned with music rather than words. While on tour in “What we found there wasn't what we had been told by the press. It wasn't as violent as it was supposed to be. Our music opened doors to people in the streets”, says David. Who in the West would expect to see Muslim women, in full black dress with their eyes barely visible, joining the revelry and dancing to the music of Babylon Circus, right alongside the men? When they paraded down the street, within minutes they found themselves joined by 200 people, some of whom closed their shops to join in. The band captures these fleeting, special moments on Dances of Resistance, from the consuming joy of street revelry in the instrumental track “Parade acoustique” to the melancholic desperation of a man in love in “J'aurais bien voulu.” Their music can be taken two ways, with a deeper meaning always lurking under the revelry and hilarity. “De la musique et du bruit” tells the story of a district party in Then there is the time that David nearly lost his life in a battle with a flight of stairs after drinking too much vodka post-gig in Touring from city to city, from Babylon to Babylon, the band embraces this pursuit of alternate realities and social justice. Life is sometimes hard, and takes its toll. But in the words of Babylon Circus, “sometimes dancing is the best way not to fall.”
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Babylon Circus : NEW ALBUM, March 09 !












