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In 2021 Antonić published the book Kako (ni)je propao rokenrol u Srbiji (How Rock 'n' Roll in Serbia (Didn't) Came to an End). Besides Antonić's essays on Serbian rock scene , the book also features a list of 100 best Serbian rock albums published after the breakup of SFR Yugoslavia.
Sarajevo Music Academy was founded by the Decision of the National Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina on May 20, 1955 as the fourth such higher education institution in the former joint state, and the first established after the World War II.
The Museum of Literature's building is located in Stari Grad (transl. Old Town), more precisely Baščaršija neighborhood in the heart of Sarajevo, in close proximity to the new Despić House. This older family house was built in the middle of the 19th century, and was originally owned by the Skarić family and was a birth house of Vladislav ...
The Sarajevo War Theatre (Bosnian: Sarajevski ratni teatar / Сарајевски ратни театар, SARTR) is a theatre in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was founded on 17 May 1992 on the initiative of Dubravko Bibanović, Gradimir Gojer , Đorđe Mačkić and Safet Plakalo during the Siege of Sarajevo .
A notable female artist in this category was Jadranka Stojaković from Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. She was an author of the main music theme for the 1984 Winter Olympics held in Sarajevo. Since 1988, she resides in Japan. An artist notable for socially engaged lyrics was Marko Brecelj, formerly a member of Buldožer.
Sarajevo: RTV Sarajevo 1 June 1961 Radio and Television of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BHRT) SR Croatia: Zagreb: RTV Zagreb 15 May 1956 Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT) SR Macedonia: Skopje: RTV Skopje 14 December 1964 Macedonian Radio-Television (MRT) SR Montenegro: Titograd: RTV Titograd 4 May 1964 Radio Television of Montenegro (RTCG) SR Serbia ...
Beograd (Serbian Cyrillic: Београд, trans. Belgrade) was a Serbian and Yugoslav electronic music band formed in Belgrade in 1980.. Beograd was formed by Slobodan Stanić (synthesizer) and Ljubodrag Bubalo (bass guitar, synthesizer), and was soon joined by Ljubodrag's brother Milan Bubalo (rhythm machine, electric drums) and Dejan Stanisavljević (synthesizer, vocals).
The couple lived in Sarajevo and they survived the Siege of Sarajevo during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. [5] She was one of the speakers at the funeral for Safet Isović on 3 September 2007. Although retired from public life and opting to rarely grant interviews, she agreed to be interviewed for a November 2014 article with the newspaper ...