Milan Mladenović

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Milan Mladenović
Born September 21, 1958(1958-09-21)
Died November 5, 1994 (aged 36)
Genre(s) Rock, post-punk, New Wave
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar
Years active 1977–1994
Associated acts Limunovo drvo
Šarlo akrobata
Katarina II / Ekatarina Velika

Milan Mladenović (September 21, 1958November 5, 1994) was a Yugoslav and Serbian musician best known as the frontman of Serbian rock band Ekatarina Velika.

Born in Zagreb, FPR Yugoslavia, where his father, an officer in the Yugoslav Army, was stationed at the time, Milan grew up wherever it was that his dad's job took the family. In total, it ended up being three different cities. When he was six, Milan's family moved to Sarajevo where he spent a notable part of his childhood. Eventually in 1970, they moved to Belgrade just short of his 12th birthday.

Once in Belgrade, Milan attended the Eleventh Belgrade Gymnasium while simultaneously entering the circle of young people involved with music and arts.

With schoolmate Gagi Mihajlović, he formed a band called Limunovo drvo (Lemon Tree) that dabbled in melodic hard rock. The group changed lineups frequently, displaying a pretty limited creative potential until the arrival of bassist Dušan Kojić Koja and drummer Ivan Vdović VD. Soon afterwards, they adopted a new musical direction (novi talas) and changed the name to Šarlo akrobata. Šarlo akrobata released only one record, "Bistriji ili tuplji, čovek biva kad..." in July 1981 and broke up soon afterwards due to conflicts between Milan and Koja. The record is considered to be one of the best and most important albums of the Yugoslav New Wave music scene.

In late 1981 Milan and his former bandmate from Limunovo drvo Gagi Mihajlović (guitar) hooked up again to form Katarina II. In 1982 Margita Stefanović (keyboards), Bojan Pečar (bass) and Ivan Vdović joined the band. After the self-titled, New Wave coloured debut album, VD and Gagi left the band. Since Gagi claimed ownership of the Katarina II name, the band was forced to take another one. They eventually settled on Ekatarina Velika and released a self-titled album in 1985. The album was widely critically acclaimed and brought them wider attention. Their next album S' vetrom uz lice launched them to the very top of the Yugoslav music scene, where they stayed for a long time, releasing a series of successful records. The concerts were jam packed and finally their music even made it on the state radio.

In the spring of 1994, Milan recorded and released an album called Angel's Breath in Brazil together with his old friend Suba (Mitar Subotić). In August it was discovered that he had pancreatic cancer. He died on November 5 in Belgrade, FPR Yugoslavia.

Two streets in the capital cities of former Yugoslav republics bear Mladenović's name. A street in the Belgrade neighborhood of Zemun Polje was named after him in 2004[1], as well as a street in Zabjelo neighborhood of Podgorica in 2007.[2]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Pop and rock music of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Music of Yugoslavia - SFR Yugoslav pop and rock scene - Yugoslav Band Aid (YU Rock Misija) - Yugoslavia in the Eurovision Song Contest
Record labels
Jugoton - PGP RTB - Suzy Records - Diskoton - ZKP RTLJ - Jugodisk