Nele Karajlić
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
dr. Nele Karajlić a.k.a. Nelle Karajlic (born Nenad Janković, December 11, 1962 in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia) is a rock and roll musician, composer, actor and television director.
One of the founders of New Primitivism movement in Sarajevo, he's a singer and co-author of the Zabranjeno Pušenje's songs. He also participated in TV shows Top Lista Nadrealista and Složna braća. During the Bosnian War Nele moved to Belgrade, Serbia where he formed one of two factions of Zabranjeno Pušenje, (later renamed to "No Smoking Orchestra").
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Born into an upper middle class family hailing from Kladovo in Serbia - his father Srdjan Jankovic was a linguist and professor of oriental sciences at University of Sarajevo's Faculty of Philosophy - young Nenad was a mischievous kid with short attention span.
Following in his dad's footsteps, Nenad also studied Orientalism at the same school where his father taught. As his music and TV career took off, the studies were no longer a priority and he never finnished them.
He earned his 'doctorate' and nom de guerre "Nele Karajlić" from neighborhood buddies since they all semi-jokingly indentified with Partisan conspirators from the World War II period. "It later proved to be useful," Nele says "since no one outside our group could really tell which nationality we were when the pre-war tensions started". [1]
[edit] Music career
[edit] Nele & Sejo - the original Zabranjeno pušenje
As Zabranjeno Pušenje's music and shtick started to catch on all over ex-Yugoslavia during mid-'80s, Nele became one of the better-known public figures in the entire country. His skinny figure, unkempt style and protruding jaw made a perfect visual companion to dishevelled philosophy of New Primitivism that the band claimed to follow and propagate.
Never content to merely let the music do the talking, Nele often engaged in matters he knew would create a stir. Some of them, like the now famous 'Marshall episode', seem ridiculously benign and innocuous by today's standards but nevertheless raised a furor in the still fairly closed-minded post-Tito communist Yugoslavia of the 1980s. Band's pre-show press conferences often assumed the form of a debate club with Nele charming journalists while pontificating on issues ranging from lower league soccer to Karl Marx's Manifesto. It was part publicity tool, part socio-political theatre, part ball busting.... and perhaps somewhere deep underneath there may have even been some wisdom.
As far as on-stage behavior goes, dr Nele Karajlić was probably the first Yugo rock frontman to take a truly active approach while in front of a crowd. Fully utilizing the stage equipment, he would climb stage walls, dive into the audience, rip his clothes off, simulate fellatio on microphones, flip crowds off, etc. One particular occasion during 1985/86 tour at Vatroslav Lisinski hall in Zagreb (place that usually hosts opera singers and symphony orchestras and hence has a bolted down concert piano on stage) saw him get on top of the said piano, and proceeding to dry hump it for an extended period - all of which got him a big cheer from the crowd but also managed to offend many purists.
The band started to hit it big fairly quickly. Their debut album Das ist Walter appeared in June 1984 and immediately made apparent they were going to be much more than just a local Sarajevo attraction. Country-wide tour soon commenced and it brought Nele his first real taste of stardom when they played a sold-out 6,000 capacity Hala sportova in Belgrade on November 4, 1984. Nele, who at this time was also starring on Top Lista Nadrealista TV sketch show, became a bona fide celebrity. His face started popping up on fold-out posters in entertainment magazines and the electronic media couldn't get enough of him.
Over the next 7 years Pušenje recorded 3 more studio albums and played countless sold-out arenas until in late 1991 Nele and Sejo Sexon decided to go their separate ways.
Nele-Sejo relationship was always the band's nucleus. Having written lyrics and music for most of the songs, the duo was running the band while rest of the group employed a revolving door policy.
The circumstances under which Zabranjeno pušenje ceased to exist, at least in its first incarnation, are not entirely clear. In later interviews, Nele has explicitly stated that Pušenje disbanded when Sejo informed him about not wanting to play anymore in late 1991 and that it had nothing to do with war, while Sejo seems to suggest break-up occurred implicitly when Nele fled for Belgrade in the spring of 1992, soon after ethnic fighting flared up in Bosnia.
Whatever it was, the two would continue separately from that point on, and there is no indication they've ever met face to face since then.
Their already complex working-business friendship/relationship is further burdened by their ethnic background - Nele is a Serb while Sejo is a Croat. Although never openly hostile in interviews when the topic of old times is broached, both men noticeably try to project an air of indifference about one another.
[edit] Dr. Karajlić goes to Belgrade
In Belgrade, Nele was a refugee - albeit a famous one. Together with his wife Sanja and their infant daughter he spent his first Belgrade days in the apartment belonging to Rambo Amadeus. For the most part, music was the furthest thing on his mind during this period. He could be seen across town waiting in lines in front of different charity organizations like ADRA in order to send food packages to family members in Sarajevo.
His first post-original-Pušenje music gig was a low-publicity duet with Toni Montano on a quickly forgotten track called "Srećna porodica".
Throughout the 1993-1996 period, Nele played with different musicians on recreational basis under the name Zabranjeno pušenje. He did not record any new material and would occasionally play an odd club date or two in Belgrade. In September 1995 he traveled to Toronto where he met up with Mladen Pavičić 'Pava', formerly of Plavi orkestar, and some local musicians for a Pušenje show.
During this time he also collected and honed material for a possible new album, although he wasn't quite sure when or even if he would like to release it. Or, for that matter, if Belgrade audiences still had any interest in a band-less rocker from Sarajevo.
The event that finally made him realize he could still be relevant was a concert at Belgrade's Tašmajdan stadium which the band booked somewhat pretentiously for September 13th, 1996. The place seats around 10,000 and the plan was to play old Pušenje songs with some unfinished new material sprinkled in throughout. Amazingly, the stadium was packed and the show turned into a comeback triumph that couldn't be spoiled even by the pouring rain.
On the strength of their Belgrade success they embarked on a mini-tour across FR Yugoslavia, Macedonia, Republika Srpska and Slovenia during which they played some memorable arena gigs in Novi Sad, Skopje, Banja Luka and Ljubljana.
This sudden unexpected surge of public interest made Nele feel added responsibility for the quality of the material about to be released, so he postponed the already set album release date because he felt songs were still not tight enough.
Finally in 1997 the Belgrade fraction of Zabranjeno pušenje released Ja nisam odavle (I'm not from around 'ere) which did very well commercially in Serbia even if reviews weren't as glowing.
In 1998 members of Pusenje joined forces with Riblja čorba's Bora Đorđević to record two Yugoslavia fan songs for the upcoming soccer World Cup in France. Two tracks entitled "Pobednička pesma" (Winners' song) and "Gubitnička pesma" (Losers' song) featured Nele and Bora singing praises and insults respectively to the FR Yugoslavia national team. The idea was to have a song ready for each case - victory and defeat.
Around this time Nele collaborated with film director and former Zabranjeno pusenje bass player Emir Kusturica on the soundtrack for the Black Cat, White Cat movie. Off that record, the track "Pit bull" became a moderate hit as well as "Bubamara" - a gypsy brass version of "Ženi nam se Vukota" (Vukota's Getting Married) from Ja nisam odavle.
[edit] The No Smoking Orchestra
After Black Cat, White Cat finnished its theatrical life, Nele and the band were approached by Emir Kusturica for an Italian tour in the summer of 1999, right after the NATO bombing of FR Yugoslavia. The idea was obviously to ride the wave of Kusturica's popularity so the band got renamed to Emir Kusturica & The No Smoking Orchestra even if the famous director had a fairly minor musical role in it. The tour named Effeti Collaterali was a big success and they soon released a Europe-wide album for Universal named Unza Unza Time.
This was the third incarnation of Zabranjeno pusenje. They did away with traditional rock'n'roll sound but kept the attitude. Booming guitar took a back seat to accordion and violin, while Nele's scratchy howl assumed a more sedated tone. In the 2001 documentary Super 8 Stories legendary Joe Strummer, clearly at a loss for words, describes their sound as "this crazy Greek-Jewish wedding music of the past,... and the future".
That movie, directed by Kusturica details goings-on throughout their first two tours. A second one that started in the spring of 2000 saw them pay visits to cities in France, Spain, Portugal, Germany and of course Italy, which had by this time become their business base.
The band's touring agenda was set around Kusturica's movie schedule (he was shooting Life is a Miracle at the time), which is why they waited until 2004 for the next tour that in addition to their usual stomping grounds also took them to such far flung places as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Venezuela and Israel.
Even if he doesn't have the highest billing anymore, Nele is still the band's de facto frontman. Kusturica's role is that of a Trojan horse - his starpower draws people to shows, he then does his talking bit at the beginning and in-between some songs (often purposly delivered in broken English) and finally turns the audience over to Nele & Co. Being aware of his limited playing capabilities, Kusta takes a backseat role as the rhythm guitar player.
It's clearly a setup that suits Nele just fine. He and the band would probably never have the opportunity to achieve an international music career on their own and that's why Nele often likens Kusturica's approach and the subsequent Zabranjeno pusenje's transformation to "someone opening a window in a stuffy room".
Ironically, this makeover robbed them of huge popularity at home in Serbia. This was most evident on July 3, 2004 when they played their first and so far only domestic show in Belgrade. Conceptually it was to be a celebration of the band's 20th year anniversary (if you assume continuity between all of the band's incarnations) for which they joined forces with another local favourites Riblja Čorba, who were celebrating their 25th.
The concert drew 40,000 but it quickly turned unpleasant after No Smoking Orchestra took the stage. The crowd coldly tolerated their new shtick (songs in Spanish, German, Romany and English, Nele's new ethno getup, etc.) throughout the first few songs but soon began to show hostility when it became clear old classics would not be played. Instead of Zabranjeno pusenje, the crowd got The No Smoking Orchestra, and they didn't like it one bit. The stage was pelted with half-filled plastic water bottles forcing the band to abandon their set after barely 40 minutes. It was an unpleasant homecoming and a clear statement that their new style is not welcomed by hardcore fans.
The band didn't dwell on it, though. They continued the tour, crossing Europe, South America and even parts of Asia. In May 2005 they played a show in Cannes, France during the film festival for a movie industry crowd including Salma Hayek and Javier Bardem.
In February 2006, Nele was reported to have sung a song in praise of Radovan Karadžić during a concert in Buenos Aires in 2005. During an interlude in "Wanted Man", performed by Emir Kusturica & The No Smoking Orchestra, Emir Kusturica and Nele are reported to have said: "Ko ne voli Radovana, ne viđeo Đurđevdana" (trans. Who doesn't love Radovan, isn't to see Đurđevdan)[2]. Though Nele strongly denied this accusation [3], he repeatedly sang the line while performing in Zurich on 10 April 2006.[citation needed]