Panic in Babylon

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (15 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 71:15

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question

lagata

Is there any difference between this album and the Damp Music / Finetunes version also available on emusic? The tracks are different lengths by a matter of seconds...but those could be some crucial seconds. Do I need to download both to sate my Perry-mania???

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Whatever.

brothermarcus

Review deleted. Emusic screws their loyal customers by hiking the rates, reducing the downloads, and going mainstream. And two year old Sony crap at that. To hell with you, emusic.

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Great

SpyralOut

I downloaded this album pretty much on a whim, and couldn't be more surprised. I know little of Raggae beyond the ubiqutous Bob Marley songs, but I sense I will be delving further into Perry's catalogue in the future. My favorite song on the album is "Fight to the Finish" with other notables being "Voodoo", "Rastafari", "Panic in Babylon", and "Pussy Man".

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The sound of art

Thrill

Who is Scratch? He is simply the Salvador Dali of reggae music. His creativity is limited simply to the time he's sleeping.

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Return of the king!

TJames

Possibly the best reggae album for over two decades..buy this , get it in the mainstream charts and let people, understand music can still have a message besides money and sex . All Hail the Upsetter!

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They Say All Media Guide

Yes, he’s a genius, and yes, he’s probably certifiably nuts, and yes, that combination of genius and insanity has now yielded several decades of absolutely brilliant (if notoriously inconsistent) music. And yes again, it’s true that most of what has come out under his name in the last seven or eight years has been a big disappointment. But the latest album from Lee “Scratch” Perry is a brilliant return to form. On Panic in Babylon he’s teamed up with the White Belly Rats, a Swiss reggae band with an uncommon ability to simultaneously stir up rich, dense reggae grooves and put the focus squarely on Perry and his sometimes incoherent, sometimes brilliant, sometimes hilarious ravings. Things come together in a perfect storm of reggae power on “Fight to the Finish,” with its gorgeous chorus and stomach-churning dubwise groove, and on the ferocious “Baby Krishna,” on which a swinging one-drop beat underpins Perry’s invocations of Hindu deities, American presidents and Babylonian destruction. Not everything is equally brilliant — “Pussy Man” is one of Perry’s most threadbare conceits — but when he invites you to “have a Perry salad/For this is Perry ballad” halfway through the album, you’ll be more than willing to take him up on the offer. – Rick Anderson

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