Arab Times

Yugoslav rock breakup victim

‘YU rock dawn’

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BELGRADE, July 28, (AFP): Little more than a quarter-century ago, Yugoslav rockers sold millions of records, went on mega-tours and the country’s vibrant musical press breathless­ly followed every album, band bust-up and reunion.

Today, to the sorrow of its ageing followers, this small but rich seam of world music is no more.

A once-dynamic industry has ebbed away, a victim of the breakup that saw the Yugoslav Federation disintegra­te bloodily into seven states.

Petar Janjatovic is author of the “YU Rock Encycloped­ia” — an almanac of the glory days.

He points to the fate of the band Zabranjeno Pusenje (“No smoking”), as the emblem of what happened.

Rock bands that, before, had a happy mix of Croats, Serbs and Bosnians found themselves breaking apart along ethnic lines as claims of loyalty weighed upon them.

Split

Once based in Sarajevo, the Zabranjeno Pusenje split — with one band continuing in Zagreb and another in Belgrade ... and both of them playing under the same name.

“This group is a metaphor of Yugoslavia’s dissolutio­n. Two friends who grew up together and were separated by the war,” Janjatovic says.

Zabranjeno Pusenje guitarist Davor Sucic, nicknamed Seyo Sexon, who left for Zagreb, contends the bustup had “nothing to do with religion, ideology or nationalis­m... we disagreed on how to continue”.

In Belgrade, his former buddy Nenad Jankovic, nicknamed Dr Nele Karajlic, prefers to remain silent.

Rock bloomed in Yugoslavia thanks to a unique twist of history.

In the Soviet bloc, Western music was frowned upon by Communist regimes as decadent or subversive.

But Tito’s Yugoslavia, while also communist and ruled with an iron fist, was eager to present itself as more liberal and more humane.

“It tolerated the developmen­t of rock,” says Dragan Kremer, a prominent music critic at the time.

In 1972, Goran Bregovic and his progressiv­e rock group Bijelo Dugme (“White Button”) set down the foundation­s YU rock.

Their debut album “Kad bi’ bio bijelo dugme” (“If I Were a White Button”) was a huge success, propelling the band to Led Zeppelinli­ke stardom at local level.

Massive

“It was a revolution­ary phenomenon. Its impact was massive,” recalls Sinisa Skarica, the group’s producer at the time.

In 1977, Bregovic made a brilliant move by staging a free openair concert Belgrade’s Kosutnjak forest. As many as 100,000 people showed up — it became known as the “Yugoslav Woodstock” — and YU rock was born.

At their zenith, Skarica’s Zagrebbase­d production company Jugoton and its Belgrade rival PGP RTS cranked out more than a million and a half records monthly, in a country of just 20 million people.

“We were playing 200-250 gigs a year,” recalls Misa Aleksic, bassist with the Serbian group Riblja Corba (“Fish Soup”).

“Sometimes, you even forgot which town you were in,” says the group’s frontman Bora Djordjevic.

Tito’s death in 1980 did not mean the end for YU rock. Quite the contrary: the demise of the Communist strongman was followed by a rise in raucous anti-establishm­ent sounds.

Elektricni Orgazam, Elvis J. Kurtovich Idoli, Sarlo Akrobata, Azra, Film, Prljavo Kazaliste... their names may have little resonance outside the Balkans, but within Yugoslavia, their music was a new wave — a swipe at musical and sometimes political convention.

Loyalties were sometimes fiercely local, with bands such as Partibrejk­ers in Belgrade, Haustor in Zagreb and an autonomous movement in Sarajevo which was called “the new primitives.”

“It was the golden age of Yugoslav rock,” Skarica says simply.

But Tito’s death also unleashed the forces of nationalis­m. Musicians watched helplessly as the Yugoslav federation began to strain and then fall apart.

In July 1991, as war flared in Croatia, some of the top bands launched a desperate appeal for peace at a concert in Sarajevo. Their bid was in vain: over the next decade, 130,000 people would die and millions would flee their homes.

“I don’t think that we could have prevented” the federation’s breakup, said Aleksic. “We are only musicians.”

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