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During his club career, Milutinović played for FK Bor, FK Partizan, OFK Beograd, FC Bayern Munich, RCF Paris, and Stade Français Paris.In the 1955–56 season, he scored two goals in the first ever European Champion Clubs' Cup match, a 3–3 draw between FK Partizan and Sporting Clube de Portugal, then scored four goals in the return leg which Partizan won 5–2 in Belgrade.
Miloš signed an exclusive recording contract to Deutsche Grammophon in 2010. His career began its meteoric rise in 2011 with the release of his debut album Mediterráneo [5] (titled The Guitar for the U.K. market), topping the classical charts around the world and turning him into “classical music’s guitar hero” (the Telegraph). [6]
His mother originates from White Carniola, which is a small traditional region in southeastern Slovenia.His father is of Serbian descent.His grandfather was a Serbian soldier who fought on the Salonika front in the First World War, to whom he also dedicated a song called "Pukni zoro" from his album Montevideo, Bog te video in 2013.
Devet života (transl. Nine Lives, stylized as IX života) is the third studio album by Serbian singer Aleksandra Prijović.It was released on digital platforms independently through A Music on 26 June 2023. [1]
Miloš Radanović; Personal information; Full name: Miloš Radanović: Date of birth 5 November 1980 (age 44)Place of birth: Pljevlja, SFR Yugoslavia: Height: 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) ...
Vulović was born between the night of April 30 and morning of May 1, 1955 in Bijeljina, [3] [4] PR Bosnia and Herzegovina into a Serbian-Montenegrin family. His grandfather was from Montenegro , and his father was a prisoner of war in Germany during World War II .
Milos R. Popovic is a scientist specializing in Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) and neurorehabilitation. As of 2018, he is Director of the KITE Research Institute at UHN Toronto Rehabilitation Institute (TRI), and a Professor with the Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Toronto.
("Oj, Junaštva Svjetla Zoro, oj! "). It was played in public for the first time in 1863 in the national theater in Belgrade. It was a component song of the "Battle of Grahovo or blood feud in Montenegro" (Бој на Грахову или крвна освета у Црној Гори) heroic play in three parts. [3]