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"Vidovdan" (Serbian: Видовдан) is the name of a Serb folk song that was written by Milutin Popović know by his stage name Zahar and featured on the 1989 album with the same name of Gordana Lazarević, a singer from Serbia.
The lyrics of the song are penned by Relja Torinno [], while the music and arrangement are signed by Henny [] and Jhinsen [], all from the Generacija Zed [] label. [11] [12] [13] Breskvica points out that the lyrics are about the "epic battle between good and evil, about the hope that good always wins in the end, as well as that it has the power to restore everything that evil destroyed".
Serbian heavy metal band Alogia covered the songs "Mezimac" and "Hajde da se volimo" on their 2006 live album Priče o vremenu i životu – Live at SKC (Tales of Time and Life – Live at SKC), with Šepa making a guest appearance on the songs. [14] Serbian hard rock and heavy metal band Atlantida recorded a cover of the song "Igraj sad ...
It is a 12-minute long music video which features all three songs. Its concept was created by Konstrakta herself, alongside Ana Rodić and its director Maja Uzelac. The video and the songs illustrate modern-day life in Serbia, each of them in its own way. [1] [6] On 23 June 2023, Triptih was rereleased by Gruvlend! and Virgin in form of an ...
The song lyrics for the album had been written by the vocalists Kovačević and Popović, and the music and arrangements were done by Kovačević, Luković and Miljenović and guest appearances featured former Eyesburn frontman Nemanja Kojić (trombone on "Ratujemo ti i ja" and "Zubarka" ("The Dentist"), the multi-instrumentalist Aleksandar ...
It featured two previously unrecorded songs: "Slovenačka reč" ("A Word in Slovenian"), recorded live and sung by Milenković, featuring music from the band's old song "Idem (Kao da ne idem, a idem)" and Slovenian language lyrics written by journalist Sonja Javorik, and "Pesna protiv maleri" ("A Song against Bad Luck"), recorded in studio for ...
“Siv sokole” is a collection of 20 songs from Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (Kosovo and Metochy, Banija, Dalmatia, Lika) which in full splendor use the abundance of five trained voices which effortlessly transfer from one style to another, from one geographical and mental into another geographical and mental space, exhibiting the astounding span of techniques and also astounding ...
The Scotsman writer Erin Adam gave the song a neutral review, rating the song six points out of 10. [19] ESC Beat's Doron Lahav ranked the song 11th overall, stating that they thought the lyrics were "meaningful". [20] Amongst Balkan personalities, reception has also been mixed. Josip Bošnjak of Index.hr dubbed the song "Džanum 2". [21]