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  2. Serbia and Montenegro in the Eurovision Song Contest 2006

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbia_and_Montenegro_in...

    Prior to the 2006 Contest, Udruženje javnih radija i televizija (UJRT) had participated in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Serbia and Montenegro as an independent country two times since its first entry in 2004 when it achieved its best placing with the song "Lane moje" performed by Željko Joksimović, placing second in the final. [1]

  3. Jana (singer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jana_(singer)

    Jana was born in Pristina on March 15, 1974 and grew up in the village of Babin Most, near the town of Obilić, SFR Yugoslavia. [1]Her career started at the age of fourteen, in 1988, when she visited a well-known kafana in the town of Obilić one night with her parents and brother (who played the accordion).

  4. Jelena Rozga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jelena_Rozga

    Jelena Rozga (born 23 August 1977) is a Croatian pop, folk, and electropop singer. Born and raised in Split, Croatia, Rozga was a ballet dancer as a child. She rose to fame in 1996, when she became the lead singer of Magazin, a pop band famous in Croatia.

  5. Moja domovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moja_domovina

    Vratit ću se moram doći, tu je moj dom, Moje sunce, moje nebo. Novi dan se budi kao sreća osvaja Ti si tu sa nama (Sa nama!) Every day I think about you I listen to the news, I count my steps Restlessness is in our hearts, but love is in us There is only one truth Every star is shining for you Rocks are breaking, the song is traveling

  6. Mira (singer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira_(singer)

    Maria Mirabela Cismaru (born March 12, 1995, in Rovinari), known by the stage name Mira (stylized MIRA), is a Romanian singer. [1] Mira became known once she appeared in the second season of the talent show Vocea României, where she had the singer and composer Marius Moga as her mentor.

  7. Cântă cucu-n Bucovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cântă_cucu-n_Bucovina

    Map of the region of Bukovina, divided between Romania and Ukraine "Cântă cucu-n Bucovina" or "Cântă cucu în Bucovina" (transl. "Sings the Cuckoo in Bukovina") is a Romanian folk song, more precisely a doină, composed in 1904 by Constantin Mandicevschi [de; ru; uk].

  8. Zabranjeno Pušenje - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabranjeno_Pušenje

    What would eventually become Zabranjeno Pušenje was started in 1979 by sixteen-year-old Nenad Janković (later to become known as dr. Nele Karajlić) and eighteen-year-old Davor Sučić (later Mr. Sejo Sexon), two teenage friends and neighbors who had been attending Sarajevo Second Gymnasium secondary school while residing in the same apartment building on Fuad Midžić Street in the Sarajevo ...

  9. Bijelo Dugme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bijelo_Dugme

    Bijelo Dugme (trans. White Button) was a Yugoslav rock band, formed in Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1974. Bijelo Dugme is widely considered to have been the most popular band ever to exist in the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and one of the most notable acts of the Yugoslav rock scene and Yugoslav popular music in general.