- Music of Serbia and Montenegro
Serbia and Montenegro was aBalkan country, recently ravaged by war that has caused widespread migration and cultural oppression.fact|date=March 2008 Indigenousfolk music ("narodna muzika ") remains popular, both traditional tunes and more modern compositions. The most modernized form of folk music isnovokomponovana narodna muzika ,fact|date=March 2008 which is a best-selling genre throughoutSerbia andMontenegro .fact|date=March 2008Novokomponovana can be seen as a result of the urbanization of folk music. In its early times, it had a professional approach to performance, uses
accordion andclarinet and typically includes love songs or other simple lyrics (though there have long been royalist, anti-Communist and democratic lyrical themes persisting underground).fact|date=March 2008 Many of the genre's best performers also play Bosniansevdalinka music or other forms imported from even further abroad. These includeŠaban Šaulić ,Toma Zdravković ,Predrag Gojković Cune ,Miroslav Ilić andLepa Lukić .fact|date=March 2008 At a later stage, the popular performers such asVesna Zmijanac ,Lepa Brena ,Dragana Mirković were using more influences frompop music , oriental music, and other genres, which ultimatively led to explosion of turbo-folk.The era of
turbo-folk took place during the war and crisis of 1990s. Turbo-folk used Serbian folk and novokomponovana as the basis, and adding influences fromrock and roll , soul, house andUK garage .Turbo-folk is aggressive and swift, and includes popular performers likeCeca , widow ofŽeljko Ražnatović , andJelena Karleuša . Turbo-folk is mostly used as a derogatory term as the music and its protagonists celebrate kemp, hedonism, and even gangster way of living ("Koka-kola, Marlboro, Suzuki" is one of (in) famous popular song titles of the time). Some musicians used their music to protest against Milošević during the 1990s, such as theRimtutituki project, while others were seen as having used music and cultural expression to incite extremist nationalist fervor.There are many rock bands that exist since 1970s and 1980s. Some of the older Yugoslav rock bands were
Smak ,YU-Grupa andKorni-Grupa . The "Golden age" of Yugoslav rock music occurred during the 1980s whenBelgrade 'sNew Wave music bands, such asElektrični orgazam ,Idoli ,Šarlo Akrobata and later itsspin-off sDisciplina Kičme andEkatarina Velika , drew new frontiers in musical expression. Their music is listened to mainly by the young urban population. Today, the most famous mainstream performers includeRiblja čorba ,Bajaga i Instruktori and Van Gogh,fact|date=March 2008 whileRambo Amadeus andDarkwood Dub are the most prominent musicians of the "alternative" scene.fact|date=March 2008Pop music has been catching up with the popularity of folk in recent years.fact|date=March 2008 Newer artists that perform this kind of music include:
Vlado Georgiev , Negative,Madame Piano ,Orthodox Celts ,Ana Stanić , Night Shift, andŽeljko Joksimović who was runner-up in theEurovision Song Contest 2004 , along with old starsĐorđe Balašević andZdravko Čolić .There are also numerous hip-hop bands and artists, mostly from Belgrade but other cities as well: GRU, 187,
C-Ya ,Beogradski Sindikat .Brass band s are extremely popular, especially in southern and central Serbia. This tradition is now dominated by Gypsy musicians who achieve sometimes great popularity; Fejat Sejdić,Bakija Bakić andBoban Marković are the biggest names in modern brass band bandleaders.Folk music
Pure folk music includes a two-beat dance called kolo, which is a
circle dance with almost no movement above the waist, accompanied by instrumental music made most often with anaccordion , but also with other instruments:frula (traditional kind of arecorder ),tamburica , orharmonica . Modern accordionists includeMirko Kodić andLjubiša Pavković .Sung
epic poetry has been an integral part of Balkan music for centuries, but is now found mostly in Montenegro; seeSerbian epic poetry . These long poems are typically accompanied on a one-string fiddle called thegusle , and concern themselves with subjects such as Kraljević Marko or the Battle of Kosovo Polje. More modern subjects include various celebrities and current events.The
Vlach minority in northeastern Serbia is related toRomania ns. Their popular music is most closely related to the people ofWallachia in Romania, while their traditional music shows a wide range of influences.ee also
*
Music of Serbia
*List of Serbian musicians
*Music of Montenegro
*Music of Kosovo
*Music of Vojvodina
*Guča References
*Burton, Kim. "Balkan Beats". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), "World Music, Vol. 1: Africa, Europe and the Middle East", pp 273-276. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books. ISBN 1-85828-636-0
External links
* [http://www.gucafilm.com Guča: A documentary about the Serbian trumpet festival]
* [http://www.rastko.org.yu/muzika/index.html Project Rastko category] (some text in English, RealAudio church choirs)
* [http://www.nostalgija.com/ Nostalgija.com] - a heap of MP3s (site in Serbian)
* [http://www.geocities.com/krofnic/index1.htm Pticice] - a free MP3 album of native Serbian music
* [http://www.darkwooddub.com Darkwood Dub]
* [http://www.kissradio.biz Kiss Radio]
* [http://www.dunav.org.il Serbian folk music and dance video repository]
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