Babar Luck Explained

Babar Luck is a songwriter and musician based in the UK. Born in Pakistan in 1970 he moved to London at the age of eight years and was educated in East London [1]

Background

Former bassist of the British skacore band King Prawn,[2] Babar Luck has also recorded with numerous musicians including Suicide Bid & Ocarina, has also performed & recorded material with Sandra Falk, Captain Hotknives & Lu Edmonds and continues to create music with an array of players from all walks of life.

Babar Luck has also performed at many festivals of various 'genres' including Transmusicales Festival in France, Beautiful Days Festival in the UK & Denmark's massive Roskilde Festival.

As well as writing, recording & touring his solo works, Babar Luck is currently writing, recording & touring in a variety of musical formations - returning to his rock’n’roll roots with ‘East End Trinity’ (Babar Luck - Guitar and Vocals, Justin Hetterley - Bass and BVs, Andi Bridges - Drums and BVs), expressing his “Sci-fi” Folk music through ‘The Babar Luck World Citizen Folk Band’, via a new multicultural project featuring Italian MC Boika Esteban ‘Remaking Europe’ & has also just finished new recordings with ‘The Babar Luck Experience’ (Babar Luck - Guitar and Vocals, Fabrizio Zidarich - Bass, Tom Murrow - Drums).

Biography

In 2006, Babar Luck released solo album Care in the community which New Internationalist describe as "extraordinary".

In January 2010 Babar Luck accepted an invitation to perform at the TEDx conference in Istanbul, Turkey with the theme "The Limits of Tolerance".

Discography

Solo or own band

Duets

Captain Hotknives

Sandra Falk

Band member

Remaking Europe

East End Trinity

Suicide Bid

King Prawn

Contributions

Random Hand

Performance history

Babar Luck's previous live performances at festivals & events include

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Babar Luck: 'I use brains - and fists' . . 2006-05-26 . 2020-05-07.
  2. Book: McIver, Joel. Nu-metal: the next generation of rock & punk. 26 October 2010. 2002. Omnibus Press. 978-0-7119-9209-2. 68.