Circus (French band)
Circus is a French band established in 2012 by Calogero, Stanislas, Philippe Uminski, Elsa Fourlon and Karen Brunon. All are already established artists.
Circus  | |
|---|---|
| Origin | France | 
| Genres | Pop | 
| Years active | 2012–present | 
| Members | |
Their debut self-titled album Circus was released on 5 November 2012. The songs, mostly about the circus are written by Jean-Jacques Goldman, Dominique A, Marc Lavoine and Marie Bastide. The pre-released single from the album is "Sur un fil"[1] that was released on 18 June 2012, on radio and downloads. A big concert was also organized in Théâtre Marigny in Paris in 2013.
Band members
    
All five members contribute vocals and play at least one instrument each in the band:
- Calogero – vocals, bass guitar and harmonica
 - Stanislas – vocals, piano and keyboard
 - Philippe Uminski – vocals, guitar
 - Elsa Fourlon – vocals and guitar
 - Karen Brunon – vocals and violin
 
Discography
    
    Album
    
2012: Circus Track list
- "C'est quoi ce cirque?" (Lyrics: Marie Bastide – Jean-Jacques Goldman / Music: Calogero – Philippe Uminski) – (3:29)
 - "Sur un fil" (Lyrics: Jean-Jacques Goldman / Music: Calogero – Gioacchino – Stanislas) (4:13)
 - "Moi je joue" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine – Philippe Uminski / Music: Calogero – Stanislas) (3:18)
 - "Chagrin d'ami" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine / Music: Calogero) (3:17)
 - "Ce soir et demain" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine / Music: Calogero) (4:16)
 - "L'Amour suicide" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine / Music: Calogero) (3:22)
 - "Le Numéro" (Lyrics: Philippe Uminski / Music: Calogero – Stanislas) (3:28)
 - "Les Nuits romaines" (Lyrics: Dominique A / Music: Calogero – Stanislas) (5:30)
 - "La Prière de Rosa" (Lyrics: Marie Bastide / Music: Stanislas) (1:14)
 - "Je tombe" (Lyrics: Marie Bastide / Music: Calogero) (3:26)
 - "Stella monte" (Lyrics: Marie Bastide / Music: Gioacchino – Stanislas) (2:21)
 - "Souvenir" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine / Music: Calogero – Gioacchino – Stanislas) (3:22)
 - "L'Origine" (Lyrics: Marc Lavoine / Music: Calogero) (3:35)
 
References
    
    
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.