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The Yugoslav band Bijelo Dugme recorded a version of the song for their 1984 self-titled album. [16] The Yugoslav and Slovenian band Laibach recorded an electronic version of the song, with lyrics in both English and Slovene, for their 2006 album Volk. [17] The song is also featured in the 2002 Slovenian film Headnoise. [18]
Music: Davorin Jenko and Josif Runjanin, [c] 1918 [d] Adopted: 1919 () Relinquished: 1941 () Preceded by "Bože pravde" (as Kingdom of Serbia) "Ubavoj nam Crnoj Gori (as Kingdom of Montenegro) "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" (as part of Austria-Hungary) "Shumi Maritsa" and "Anthem of His Majesty the Tsar" (as part of Kingdom of Bulgaria ...
"Through Valleys and Over Hills" (Russian: По долинам и по взгорьям) or "Through Forests and Over Hills" (Serbo-Croatian: По шумама и горама / Po šumama i gorama), also known as the "Partisan's Song", is a popular Red Army song from the Russian Civil War.
"Ramonda" (Serbian Cyrillic: Рамонда) is a song by Serbian singer-songwriter Teodora Pavlovska, known by her stage name, Teya Dora. The song was released on 22 January 2024 by PGP-RTS and was written by Pavlovska, Luka Jovanović, and Andrijano Kadović.
The official music video for the song has accumulated over 75 million views on YouTube and over a hundred million streams on Spotify. Furthermore, the single peaked at number four on Spotify's Daily Viral Songs Global chart on 22 May, and Teya Dora became the third Serbian artist to have over a million monthly listeners on the streaming service.
"Molitva" (Serbian Cyrillic: Молитва; "Prayer") is a song recorded by Serbian singer Marija Šerifović with music composed by Vladimir Graić and Serbian lyrics by Saša Milošević Mare. It represented Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007, held in Helsinki, resulting in the country's only
"Emina" (Cyrillic: Емина) is a poem by Bosnian Serb poet Aleksa Šantić that became a popular sevdalinka song, covered by many prominent singers from Bosnia and Herzegovina and other parts of former Yugoslavia. It was first published in 1902 in the Serbian literary journal Kolo. [1]
"Şən Azərbaycan" (Azerbaijani Cyrillic: "Шән Азәрбајҹан", English: "Merry Azerbaijan") is a Soviet-era patriotic song about Soviet Azerbaijan that still remains popular in modern Azerbaijan. It was written in 1970 and was sung by Polad Bulbuloghlu, Muslim Magomayev, Shovkat Alakbarova, and Idris Mehdiyev , among others.