Ever since the band's inception, they have been experimenting with crashing different branches of the arts together and creating fusions from what results. At the Hey, June! festival, the ensemble will present a rescored repertoire along with a human, moving, pulsating, breathing "bio-set", in the hopes of gaining us a shared glimpse out of the Platonic Cave.
Led by Anna Pásztor, Anna and the Barbies won over their audience with starkly honest and upliftingly positive lyrics and throbbing and captivating rock beats, along with an overwhelming stage presence. Since forming in 2004, they have come out with seven full-length albums and an extended band documentary film (Álmatlan) [Sleepless] while performing countless concerts, including in venues unusual for the genre, such as the Capital Circus of Budapest and the National Theatre. In 2020, they both reassured and shook up their audience with a pointed song titled Ha egyszer ennek vége, [If this ever ends] a mentality that is also true for the band's latest video (Lábon kihordott szerelmek) [Loves worn on feet]. In the form of an acoustic concert at Müpa Budapest, the emphasis will once again be on the message, with the ancient Greek philosopher Plato's Allegory of the Cave coming to life as a total art production. As the members of Anna and the Barbies put it, "Truth shines brighter than the sun! In an almost hypnotic trance, people chained to sofas gaze at the shadow image of the world created from pixels. The tiny, life-indicating stimuli of the brain tease the host body in the visual cortex, and this pleases the host body, for it means that it might be alive and capable of perception… ”