Ljubljana–Zagreb–Beograd

Ljubljana–Zagreb–Beograd, released in 1993, is an album by Slovenian industrial group Laibach, recorded in 1982. It is named after three capitals of three former Yugoslav republics - Ljubljana (Slovenia), Zagreb (Croatia) and Beograd (Belgrade) (Serbia). It is predominantly a live album. The cover features Tomaž Hostnik, who committed suicide in 1982, the bleeding comes from a bottle thrown at him at that night's show.

Ljubljana-Zagreb-Beograd
Live album by
Laibach
ReleasedJune 7, 1993
Recorded1982
GenreIndustrial
Length69:38
LabelGrey Area
Laibach chronology
Kapital
(1992)
Ljubljana-Zagreb-Beograd
(1993)
NATO
(1994)

Track listing

  1. "Intro" (live) – :32
  2. "Unsere Geschichte" (live) (Laibach) – 1:08
  3. "Rdeči molk (Red Silence)" (live) (Laibach) – 1:46
  4. "Siemens" (Laibach) – 6:14
  5. "Smrt za smrt (Death for Death)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:26
  6. "Država (The State)" (live) (Laibach) – 6:13
  7. "Zavedali so se — Poparjen je odšel I
    (They Have Been Aware — Scalded He Left I)" (live) (Laibach) – 1:52
  8. "Delo in disciplina (Work and Discipline)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:51
  9. "Tito-Tito" (live) (a version of Zequinha de Abreu's Tico-Tico no Fubá) – 2:12
  10. "Ostati zvesti naši preteklošti — Poparjen je odšel II
    (To Stay Faithful To Our Past — Scalded He Left II)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:25
  11. "Tovarna C19 (Factory C19)" (live) (Laibach) – 2:06
  12. "STT (Machine Factory Trbovlje)" (live) (Laibach) – :31
  13. "Sveti Urh (Saint Urch)" (live) (Laibach) – 2:01
  14. "Država (The State)" (Studio Version) (Laibach) – 4:52
  15. "Cari amici soldati/Jaruzelski/Država/Svoboda
    (Dear Soldier Friends/Jaruzelski/The State/Freedom)" (Laibach) – 29:29
gollark: I mostly want an excuse to do stupid insane things.
gollark: What if CODE GUESSING 17259815?
gollark: What I can easily do is construct a backdoor which nobody else can use, but I don't think that qualifies.
gollark: And practical hidden flaws are more like "if you encrypt 2^16 bytes with the same key it is possible to determine some of the plaintext with slightly higher probability" or known plaintext attacks and such, rather than "hahaha any message whatsoever can be decrypted".
gollark: I have some rough ideas but they'd probably be obvious to anyone competent.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.