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Igri bez granici is the most successful album in Toše's career. However he died close after the album was released, resulting in him not receiving all the prizes for the album but were instead, delivered to his family.
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 .
Proeski, was born in Prilep, SFR Yugoslavia (today North Macedonia), to Dominika and Nikola Proeski from Kruševo, his hometown, where he spent most of his childhood. 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 ...
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.
The music video for the song was created by Slovenians; director Jani Černe, Matej Kavčnik and Igor Nardin from seven hours of pre-recorded material.It premiered on MTV Adria on 1 June 2008 [1] and was subsequently shown on MTV Europe and the Macedonian Radio-Television network.
Božilak (Macedonian: Божилак, 'Rainbow') is the sixth studio album by the Macedonian singer Toše Proeski, released in Macedonian. The album comprises fourteen traditional Macedonian songs sung with a new arrangement.
Po tebe [1] (Macedonian: По тебе) is a Macedonian edition of the fifth studio album by the Macedonian singer Toše Proeski.The album was released in Macedonia and subsequently in Serbia and Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia under the Serbo-Croatian title Pratim te (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Пратим те).