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YU 100: najbolji albumi jugoslovenske rok i pop muzike (trans. YU 100: the Greatest Yugoslav Rock and Pop Music Albums) is a book by Duško Antonić and Danilo Štrbac, published in 1998. [1] It features a list of top 100 former Yugoslav popular music albums, formed according to the poll of 70 Serbian music critics, journalists , artists and ...
100 musicians took a part in the poll. [2] Although the names of the musicians were not stated, it was stated that former and current members of Riblja Čorba, Bijelo Dugme, Smak, YU Grupa, Leb i Sol, Vatreni Poljubac, Indijanci, Zbogom Brus Li, Čovek Bez Sluha, Atheist Rap, Kerber, Prljavi Inspektor Blaža i Kljunovi, Sunshine, Oktobar 1864, Goblini, Lutajuća Srca, Novembar, Galija, Siluete ...
Bato, Bato is the third studio album by Yugoslav pop-folk singer Lepa Brena and her band Slatki Greh. It was released 5 January 1984 through the record label PGP-RTB and with over a million copies sold it is the best-selling album in Yugoslavia and made Lepa Brena a superstar outside of her home-country, especially in Bulgaria and Romania.
[6] At the end of 2007, Mandić made another partial comeback with a song "Vreme za ljubav ističe" ("Time for Love Is Running Out"), which featured folk singer Svetlana "Ceca" Ražnatović on vocals. The song was released, alongside Mandić's old hits, on the compilation album Vreme za ljubav ističe. [7]
The Ilidža Folk Music Festival (Bosnian: Festival narodne muzike Ilidža; Serbian Cyrillic: Фестивал народне музике Илиџа) is the oldest living and premier folk music festival in the Former Yugoslavia. [1] [2] [3] It is held annually in Ilidža, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Starogradska muzika (Bulgarian, Macedonian and Serbian: староградска музика; literally "old town music") is a kind of urban traditional folk music found in Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Serbia.
The song was released on the festival's official compilation album Beograde ((Oh,) Belgrade), but also on Viktorija's 1992 compilation album Viktorija. [1] In 1992, she held her first solo concert in Belgrade, in Sava Centar. [1] In 1995, she released her third album, Ja znam da je tebi krivo (I Know You're Jealous), produced by Vojislav ...
They represented Croatia at the 1995 Eurovision Song Contest, along with the opera singer Lidija Horvat-Dunjko, they performed the song "Nostalgija" finishing 6th (out of 23 entries) with 91 points. In 1996 she left Magazin to pursue a solo career, [ 1 ] but she continued to work with the band's leader and prolific songwriter Tonči Huljić .