Godina sirotinjske zabave

Godina sirotinjske zabave (trans. A Year of Poverty Amusement) is the second album by the Serbian alternative rock band Block Out, released by Metropolis Records in 1996. The album was rereleased by Multimedia records in 2004.

Godina sirotinjske zabave
Studio album by
Released1996
2004 (reissue)
RecordedMay 1995 - July 1996
Akademija studio, Belgrade
GenreAlternative rock
Grunge
Length73:26
LabelMetropolis Records
Multimedia records (reissue)
ProducerDejan Škopelja
Danilo Pavićević
Block Out chronology
Crno, belo i srebrno
(1994)
Godina sirotinjske zabave
(1996)
San koji srećan sanjaš sam
(1998)

Track listing

All tracks by Nikola Vranjković.

  1. "Veži me" (2:45)
  2. "Elektro-liza (gradski rok sa hevi elementima)" (3:30)
  3. "Vertikalno gledano" (6:40)
  4. "Trenje" (6:32)
  5. "Gledam kao..." (1:11)
  6. "Manastir" (3:20)
  7. "Kad hodam" (4:19)
  8. "Čarobni akord" (3:15)
  9. "Godina sirotinjske zabave" (8:13)
  10. "SDSS" (4:47)
  11. "Poštar" (4:12)
  12. "Nedostupna polja" (6:17)
  13. "Sekira" (3:43)
  14. "Ka zelenoj obali" (6:23)
  15. "Tri korne penal" (10:20)

Personnel

  • Miljko (Miljko Radonjić; drums)
  • Mita (Milutin Jovančić; vocals, artwork by [design])
  • Trle (Dragan Majstorović; keyboards)
  • Balać (Aleksandar Balać; bass)
  • Nikola (Nikola Vranjković; guitar, music by, lyrics by)

Additional personnel

  • Ivan Brusić (engineer [postproduction])
  • Velja Mijanović (engineer [postproduction])
  • Rodoljub Stojanović (executive producer, percussion on 5)
  • Danilo Pavićević (guitar on 1, 5, 7, 13, 14)
  • Danilo Pavićević (producer [assistant], guitar on 1, 5, 7, 13 and 14, vocals on 1 and 2)
  • Aleksandar Radosavljević (producer, recorded by, engineer [postproduction], guitar on 8 and 15, backing vocals on 1 and 2)
  • Dejan Škopelja (recorded by, co-producer on 4, 10, 12)
  • Acika Logoped (Aleksandar Stanojević; percussion on 5)
  • Vladimir Lesić (percussion on 8 and 13)
  • Miša Savić Mipi (keyboards on 4)
  • Đura Svarog (Zoran Đuroski; vocals on 9)
  • Nebojša Zulfikaprašić Keba (guitar on 15)
  • Zoran Antonijević (vocals on 8, 10, 12, 14)
  • Nemanja Popović (vocals on 10 and 12)
  • Dragoljub Marković (vocals on 14, keyboards on 7 and 14)
  • Gordan Paunović (voice on 2)

Legacy

In 2000, the song "Manastir" ("Monastery") was polled No.100 on Rock Express Top 100 Yugoslav Rock Songs of All Times list.[1]

gollark: I've read much of the Urbit stuff before, and this language seems about as insane as the rest of it.
gollark: Of course it does.
gollark: This is actually a *great* esolang, more so than lots of actual things intended as esolangs.
gollark: How do you pronounce `|=`, "pipe equals"?
gollark: Nonsense, "urbit" is 5.
  1. "100 najboljih pesama svih vremena YU rocka". Rock Express (in Serbian). Belgrade: Rock Express (25): 27.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.