Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The discography of Serbian and former Yugoslav rock band Riblja Čorba consists of 20 studio albums, 9 live albums, 6 Singles, 4 VHSes, 4 DVDs, 3 EPs, 13 compilation albums, and 1 box set. The list does not include solo material or side projects performed by the members.
Riblja Čorba's fifth studio album, Večeras vas zabavljaju muzičari koji piju (Tonight You Will Be Entertained by Musicians Who Drink), was released in 1984. [12] As Riblja Čorba's record label PGP-RTB refused to pay for the recording in London, the band signed a contract with PGP-RTB's main competitor, Jugoton. [12]
It is the third and the final part of the Riblja Čorba trilogy released during 2005 and 2006. The band considers EPs Trilogija 1: Nevinost bez zaštite , Trilogija 2: Devičanska ostrva and Trilogija 3: Ambasadori loše volje three parts of the studio album titled Trilogija , although all three were released separately.
Njihovi dani (Serbian Cyrillic: Њихови дани, trans. Their Days) is the first and only studio album released by Bora Đorđević.Although the album was recorded by the members of Đorđević's band Riblja Čorba, Đorđević decided to release the album in his own name, as the album criticizes the regime of the former president of FR Yugoslavia Slobodan Milošević and his wife ...
A Tight Spot (Serbian: Tesna koža) is a 1982 Yugoslav comedy film directed by Mića Milošević [] and written by Siniša Pavić [] along with Ljiljana Pavić [].The film achieved enormous popularity throughout SFR Yugoslavia, spawning three sequels by the end of the decade.
In 1997, Riblja Čorba issued a compilation album Treći srpski ustanak ("The Third Serbian Uprising"), which features a selection of Riblja Čorba's political songs recorded and released between 1981 and 1997. After the political changes in Serbia, he became the Deputy to Dragan Kojadinović, the Serbian Minister of Culture, in 2004.
Pišanje uz vetar (trans. Pissing Against the Wind) is the fifteenth studio album from Serbian and former Yugoslav rock band Riblja Čorba, released in 2001. Reggae tracks "Crno beli svet" and "Crno beli svet (I opet)" featured Eyesburn frontman Nemanja Kojić on vocals and trombone.
Bajagić originally intended only to record an album of his own songs and to remain a member of Riblja Čorba. [1] The songs for the album were recorded in a rented apartment in Belgrade and in Radio Television Belgrade Studio V and produced by Kornelije Kovač. [1]