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Proeski was born in Prilep [2] and grew up in Kruševo [2] into an Aromanian family. [3] [4] After his musical talent was discovered at the age of 12, he was chosen to perform at the popular children's song festival Zlatno Slavejče (eng.: Golden Nightingale) in Skopje, performing the song "Јаs i mојоt dеdо" in the Aromanian language.
It should only contain pages that are Toše Proeski albums or lists of Toše Proeski albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Toše Proeski albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The Hardest Thing is the eighth and final studio album by Toše Proeski and the first album to be released posthumously. [1] [2] It was released on 25 January 2009, shipping 120.000 copies to countries from former Yugoslavia. [3] [4] [5] Thereafter, the album will be released to other countries within Europe.
"The Hardest Thing" is the first posthumous single released by Macedonian pop musician, Toše Proeski, from his English-language album of the same name, The Hardest Thing. [1] The song premiered on the 12th annual Croatian Radio Festival on 31 May 2008.
Den za nas (Macedonian: Ден за нас) is Macedonian edition of 4th studio album by the Macedonian superstar Toše Proeski released in 2004. It is a 2-CD set which contains all of the songs performed on the National final in order to select a song for the Eurovision Song Contest 2004 with which Proeski would represent Macedonia in the contest.
Igri bez granici [1] (Macedonian: Игри без граници, English translation: "Game Without Borders") is the Macedonian edition of seventh studio album by the famous Macedonian singer Toše Proeski.
Todor Toše Proeski (Macedonian: Тодор Тоше Проески [ˈtɔʃɛ ˈprɔɛski] ⓘ; 25 January 1981 – 16 October 2007) was a Macedonian multi-genre singer, songwriter and actor. He was popular across the entire Balkan area and all around Eastern Europe , and locally he was considered a top act of the Macedonian music scene .
[2] [4] Proeski previously attempted to represent Macedonia at the Eurovision Song Contest by competing in the country's national final selections on several occasions: in 1998 with the song "Ostani do kraj" which he performed with the group Megatim Plus and placed eighth, and in 2000 with the song "Solzi pravat zlaten prsten" which placed ...