- Punk rock in Yugoslavia
Punk in Yugoslavia is the
punk subculture of the formerSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (a state that existed until 1991). The most developed punk scenes across the federation existed inSocialist Republic of Slovenia , theAdriatic coast ofSocialist Republic of Croatia , theSocialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina , the capital ofBelgrade and other places.Notable acts include:Pankrti ,Paraf ,Pekinška patka ,KUD Idijoti ,Niet ,Patareni andKBO! .History
The Non-Aligned
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was never part of theEastern Bloc , and it was open to western influences. TheYugoslav pop and rock scene was socially accepted, well developed and covered in the media. The former Yugoslav punk scene emerged in the late 1970s, influenced by the first wave of punk rock bands from theUnited Kingdom andUnited States , such asSex Pistols ,The Clash ,The Damned ,Ramones , Generation X,The Ruts ,Buzzcocks andThe Jam , as well as theproto-punk acts such asThe Stooges and theNew York Dolls . The DIYpunkzine scene also started to develop in Yugoslavia.The Yugoslav punk bands were the first punk bands ever formed in a
socialist state . Some of the first ones were formed in the thenSR Slovenia andSR Croatia :Pankrti fromLjubljana , formed in 1977, andParaf fromRijeka , depending on the source, formed in 1976 [http://www.rirock.com/izvodjaci/paraf/] or 1977. [http://www.geopoetika.com/book.php?id=99] . The Slovenian and Croatian scene of the day was featured in the "Novi Punk Val " compilation album, compiled byIgor Vidmar , which included Pankrti, Paraf,Buldogi ,Termiti ,Berlinski Zid ,Grupa 92 andPrljavo Kazalište . The late-1970s and early 1980s bands fromBelgrade , the capital of bothSR Serbia and Yugoslavia included:Defektno Efektni ,Urbana Gerila andRadnička Kontrola (feat. Cane who later came into prominence asfrontman ofPartibrejkers andSrđan Todorović , later an eminentmovie actor ). This generation of bands was included on the "Artistička Radna Akcija " compilation.Električni Orgazam was also a punk band during its early period, although it changed to a moremainstream act later. Prominent Serbianpunkabilly artist wasTonny Montano from Belgrade, formerly a singer ofRadost Evrope . FromNovi Sad ,SAP Vojvodina , used to be the groupPekinška patka , which was led by the charismatic Profesor Čonta. InSerbia Proper , inŠabac , emerged the notable Yugoslav punk writerIvan Glišić .The first punk band in
Skopje ,Socialist Republic of Macedonia is considered to beFol Jazik , formed in1978 . Other notable acts from Skopje includedBadmingtons andSaraceni , both led byVladimir Petrovski Karter . The bass player of Saraceni,Goran Trajkoski , previously played in the punk bandAfektiven naboj fromStruga . Later he was the frontman ofPadot na Vizantija and rose to international prominence as the frontman of Anastasia and Mizar. InSarajevo ,Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina , the following artists emerged:Ozbiljno pitanje (which later evolved intoCrvena Jabuka ), Ševa (which later evolved intoBombaj Štampa led byBranko Đurić ), and the cult bandZabranjeno Pušenje . These Sarajevian bands later formed the punk-inspiredNew Primitives movement.In the late
1970s , some punk bands were affiliated with theYugoslav New Wave scene, and were labeled as both punk rock and new wave. During a certain period, the term "New Wave music " was interchangeable with "punk". The most important record of the Yugoslav New Wave era is "Paket Aranžman ".The end of the 1970s and the beginning of the 1980s saw the emergence of various subgenres of punk rock, such as
streetpunk andOi! later followed by:hardcore punk ,crust punk all the way tocrossover thrash andgrindcore . Notable acts during the 1980s included, the hardcore punk bands such asNiet , Odpadki Civilizacije, Tožibabe, Epidemija and U.B.R. fromLjubljana , S.O.R. fromIdrija and Ujetniki svobode fromLaško , Slovenia; Patareni fromZagreb ,KUD Idijoti fromPula and Apatridi fromSlavonska Požega , Croatia; The Dissidents fromPrijedor and Ženevski Dekret fromMostar , Bosnia and Herzegovina;KBO! and Trula koalicija fromKragujevac , Serbia Proper; Giuseppe Carabino, Marselyeza and Proces fromSubotica , Incest fromNovi Bečej and Napred U Prošlost fromBanatsko Novo Selo , Vojvodina; and the Oi!/streetpunk bands Dva minuta mržnje, Vrisak generacije and Ritam Nereda (all three fromNovi Sad , Vojvodina). A notable mainstreampop punk band wasPsihomodo Pop from Croatia (heavily influenced by the Ramones).Many eminent foreign
punk bands played concerts in the former Yugoslavia in the late1970s and throughout the1980s , including:The Ruts ,Siouxsie & the Banshees ,UK Subs ,Angelic Upstarts ,The Exploited ,Charged GBH ,The Anti-Nowhere League , Discharge,Youth Brigade andAmebix . In1983 The Anti-Nowhere League released their album "Live in Yugoslavia ", while Angelic Upstarts released a live album with the same title in 1985.As the other punk rock artists around the world, the Yugoslav ones also included
social commentary in their songs.Anarcho-punk andStraight Edge scenes also existed, while some bands were justnihilistic . The Yugoslav punk rock and hardcore punk lyrics often featured social and political criticism,anti-war , anti-chauvinist, anti-autohritarian andlibertarian messages, which can be also seen by the bands' names, such as: Vrisak Hirošime (Cry ofHiroshima ), Apatridi (Stateless person s), The Dissidents (Dissidents ), Patareni (Patarene s), Marselyeza (La Marseillaise ), Stres Državnega Aparata (Stress Of The State Apparatus), Sistem Organizirane Represije (System Of Organized Repression) etc. There were also someapolitical bands whose songs dealt with personal subjects,humour ,sex or just innocent youth rebellion.Nazi punk affair
A great scandal emerged all over Yugoslavia, when the authorities arrested a
Nazi punk and Nazi skinhead-oriented group called The Fourth Reich inLjubljana ,Socialist Republic of Slovenia in1981 . The band itself was obscure and irrelevant, it was put on trial and imprisoned before releasing any recordings or playing live, hence leaving no legacy, and it did not have a support within the punk community. They were also once turned down by the notablepromoter andPankrti 's managerIgor Vidmar , who refused to sign them because he disapproved theirracist lyrics. [http://members.iinet.net.au/~predrag/vidmar.html] Although the existence of thepunk subculture was generally tolerated in Yugoslavia, with occassional mild cases ofcensorship , the one-party system still viewed it with certain degree of suspicion because of its "in-your-face" attitude, clothing, music and way of life which differed from the established image of model citizens. Thus, the authorities used this incident as an opportunity to label the punk movement assubversive and as a pretext to impose indiscriminate opression on allpunk s andskinhead s who began to be perceived as potential enemies of the state, although the overwhelming majority of them was actuallyanti-fascist . For example, both Pankrti andKUD Idijoti have their respectivecover version s of the Italian revolutionary song "Bandiera Rossa ".This led to
moral panic . The authorities' reaction to punks, labelling them as "fascists", reached its most absurd point in the prosecution of the aforementioned Igor Vidmar, who was bizzarely arrested for wearing theDead Kennedys ' "Nazi Punks Fuck Off! " badge with aswastika crossed out. [http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/62/066.html] That anti-fascist badge was falsely interpreted as a nazi provocation and Vidmar was detained.Despite the affair, which faded after a certain period anyway, the Yugoslav punk scene continued to exist successfully (although with less mainstream media coverage). While the first generation of groups such as Pankrti,
Paraf ,Prljavo kazalište andPekinška patka were quite well exposed in the media, having appearances andmusic videos on the national TV stations and record contracts for major labels such asJugoton ,Suzy Records andZKP RTL , the artists that came after the affair emerged, faced various problems and some succeded to gain prominence only in theunderground music circles. Apart from the affair, another reason for this is that some mainstream media began to consider punk as fad, as the initial punk euphoria ofThe Sex Pistols andThe Clash was already gone, so they turned their interest to other styles such as:post-punk ,new romantic ,synthpop ,darkwave andgothic rock , leaving much of the new generation ofstreetpunk andhardcore punk acts underestimated or unnoticed.The late
1980s and early1990s saw transition toparliamentary democracy which brought further liberalisation in the country, but also rise of extremenationalism , previously kept under control by thecommunist regime . These processes led to the disintegration of SFR Yugoslavia.In an interview published in the
post-communist and post-Yugoslav period, despite the troubles he once had with the previous system, Vidmar was quoted saying: "It is an irony that it is harder to work now in thisliberal democracy , than in the last 10 years ofSFRY 's communism". [http://arhiva.glas-javnosti.co.yu/arhiva/2001/06/24/srpski/K01062310.shtml]Yugoslav Wars
The punk scene of the
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ceased to exist with the country's violent breakup in the early1990s . Many of its former adherents participated inanti-war and anti-nationalist activities, and were often attacked by the nationalists in their countries. In 1992, the supergroupRimtutituki featuring members ofPartibrejkers ,Električni orgazam and other notable acts released apacifist single, but since the authorities didnt allow them to promote it with a gig they performed on atruck trailer driven through the streets of Belgrade, as their stage. A1993 compilation of anti-war punk songs, "Preko zidova nacionalizma i rata" (Over the walls of nationalism and war) featured bands from the ex-Yugoslav countries. However, some individuals previously involved in the Yugoslav punk scene even fought in theYugoslav wars . One example isSatan Panonski , a charismatic and controversial punk singer and poet fromVinkovci , Croatia, who had acult status in the former Yugoslav punk scene. A former convict charged with murder who spent several years in mental institutions, he was an outspoken opponent of any national chauvinism and was openly a homosexual. However, after theCroatian War of Independence began, he joined the Croatian forces and was killed under unknown circumstances. Before his death, he was a close friend ofIvan Glišić , a notable punk writer from Serbia.The local scenes in the independent countries that emerged after the breakup of Yugoslavia continued to exist, some of them heavily suffering during the war. The
underground music scene continued even in the shelters during theSarajevo siege and a compilation album "Rock under siege" (Radio Zid Sarajevo, Stichting Popmuziek Nederland) including the punk band Protest was released in1995 .After
Slovenia ,Croatia , Macedonia andBosnia and Herzegovina proclaimed independence, and SFR Yugoslavia was dissolved, a new federal state comprising only Serbia and Montenegro namedFederal Republic of Yugoslavia was established, however it was not recognized as a legal succesor to SFR Yugoslavia. [http://www.securitycouncilreport.org/atf/cf/%7B65BFCF9B-6D27-4E9C-8CD3-CF6E4FF96FF9%7D/UNMembers%20SRES777.pdf] It existed from1992 until2003 . Notable punk bands in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia included:Atheist rap ,Ritam Nereda andZbogom Brus Li fromNovi Sad ;Direktori andŠaht fromBelgrade andGoblini fromŠabac . Some of them were formed during the previous Yugoslav federation, and some still exist in the 2000s. Many bands in this period openly opposed the regime ofSlobodan Milošević and criticized chauvinism andmilitarism , but there were some who espoused radicalSerbian nationalism .Current (2000s)
After the end of the conflicts and especially later, after the departure of the nationalist leaders such as
Slobodan Milošević andFranjo Tuđman , theformer Yugoslav nations started to normalise their relations. Thus their music scenes (this time both mainstream and underground) could freely restore their former cooperation.Anti-Nowhere League came once again on former Yugoslav soil (inCroatia ) and released their live albumReturn to Yugoslavia . In2003 Igor Mirković from Croatia made therockumentary Sretno dijete (Happy Child) named after a song by Prljavo Kazalište. The movie covers the early Yugoslav Punk and New Wave scene feat. eminent artists fromZagreb ,Ljubljana andBelgrade . Inspired by "Sretno dijete", rockumentary "Bilo jednom... " was made in2006 , featuring punk-rockers fromNovi Sad , who were active during the first half of the 1990s.Current notable acts in the former Yugoslav countries:
Hladno pivo ,KUD Idijoti ,Let 3 (feat. the former Termiti member Damir Martinović Mrle), Fat Prezident, Overflow, FOB, Grupa tvog života and Gužva u 16-ercu from Croatia;Superhiks , Two Sides and Dennytechuva from theRepublic of Macedonia ;Red Union ,Zbogom Brus Li ,Atheist Rap , Six Pack, Mitesers, Ska Ringišpil, The Bayonets fromSerbia , and others.Reunions
Pankrti played a reunion concert in Tivoli Hall inLjubljana ,Slovenia on December 1, 2007 as a celebration of their 30th anniversary. They also had a tour across parts offormer Yugoslavia with Ivan Kral, who previoulsy played withPatti Smith ,Blondie andIggy Pop , as the band's new guitarist. [http://www.vojvodina.com/naslovna/arhiva8/071210.html] [http://www.popboks.com/vest.php?ID=6125] Meanwhile, inSkopje ,Republic of Macedonia , the groupBadmingtons reformed and their music was included in thesoundtrack for the feature film "" ("Upside Down") directed by Igor Ivanov Izy. At theExit festival in Novi Sad on July 13 2008,Pekinška patka played a reunion concert, sharing the stage with theSex Pistols who played afterwards that evening.Related movies
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0180633/ Dečko koji obećava]
*Sretno dijete
*Outsider
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087898/ Pejzaži u magli]
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0158610/ Kako je propao Rocknroll]
* [http://www.bilojednom.info Bilo jednom...]References
* Dragan Pavlov and Dejan Šunjka. (1990) "Punk u Jugoslaviji" (Punk in Yugoslavia). Yugoslavia: IGP Dedalus.sr icon hr icon sl icon
* [http://www.geopoetika.com/book.php?id=99 Janjatović, Petar. "Ilustrovana Enciklopedija Yu Rocka 1960-1997", publisher: Geopoetika, 1997] sr icon
*Janjatović, Petar. "EX YU ROCK enciklopedija 1960-2006". ISBN 978-86-905317-1-4
*Janjatović, Petar. "Drugom stranom - Almanah novog talasa u SFRJ" (co-authorsDavid Albahari and Dragan Kremer), 1983
*Sava Savić and Igor Todorović "Novosadska punk verzija" (Novi Sad Punk version), publisher: [http://www.skcns.org.yu/ Studentski Kulturni Centar Novi Sad] , 2006 ISBN 86-85983-05-3ee also
*
SFR Yugoslav Pop and Rock scene
*Yugoslav New Wave
*Novi Punk Val
*Paket aranžman
*Artistička Radna Akcija
*New Primitives
*Neue Slowenische Kunst
*Makedonska Streljba
*Yugoton External links
* [http://members.iinet.com.au/~predrag/vidmar.html Uzurlikzurli! Interview with Igor Vidmar]
* [http://members.iinet.net.au/~predrag/yugo.html Uzurlikzurli! E-zine about the former Yugoslav Underground]
* [https://www.profaneexistence.com/PE28OGB.html Over the Walls of Nationalism and War] onProfane Existence
* [http://www.terapija.net/mjuzik.asp?ID=319 "Paket Aranžman" and "Artistička radna akcija" review at terapija.net e-zine] hr icon
* [http://www.mizar.com.mk/tekst.asp?lang=mac&tekst=31 Member biographies - Mizar official site] mk icon
* [http://www.mladina.si/tednik/200147/clanek/kuzla/ 25th Anniversary of Punk: Interview with the first punk rocker in Slovenia - Mladina magazine November 26, 2001] sl icon
* [http://balkansnet.org/rock.html The Yugoslav punks, skins and football hooligans and the Yugoslav Wars at Balkansnet.org]
* [http://balkansnet.org/dajgudre.html "Rock under siege", Sarajevo]
* [http://punklektira.topcities.com/ Hrvatska Punk Lektira]
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