Yugoton

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Yugoton
Yugoton cover
Tribute album by Various Artists
Released 2001
Genre Various
Label ZIC ZAC Music Company/BMG

Yugoton is a tribute album released in Poland by ZIC ZAC Music Company and BMG Poland in 2001.

It features cover versions of eminent artists from SFR Yugoslavia such as: Električni orgazam, Idoli, Bajaga i Instruktori, Haustor, Prljavo kazalište and Parni valjak. Most of these artists were formerly involved in the Yugoslav New Wave scene. The songs including the main single from the Prljavo kazalište's Crno bijeli svijet album, are performed in Polish by the cover band Yugoton feat. the Polish artists: Katarzyna Nosowska, Paweł Kukiz, Olaf Deriglasoff, Ryszard „Tymon” Tymański and others. The CD also has CD ROM multimedia features for PC use.

Contents

[edit] Background

The album is a tribute to the former Yugoslav music scene. Even its very title is a nod to the Yugoslav record industry, specifically its largest and most prominent state-owned record label Jugoton, which was very popular among the youths behind the Iron Curtain, including the Poles, who couldn't travel freely to western countries and thus had difficulties accessing western music. One of their solutions around this was going shopping to socialist Yugoslavia which was not an Eastern Bloc country, and as such more open to western influences. As a result, Yugoslav records gained a cult status around Eastern Europe and became a sort of symbol of the western popular culture. Another reference to the Yugoslav records and Jugoton can be found in the film Sonnenallee (which takes place in the former East Germany), in the scene with the record smuggler.

Many of the former Yugoslav artists were touring Poland, which also had a vibrant music scene including punk rock and new wave music as well as other genres with large fanbase. In 1981 the former Yugoslav band Azra released the song Poljska u mome srcu (Poland in my heart) to boost the morale of the Polish people in the struggle of their worker's union Solidarity against the dictatorship of Wojciech Jaruzelski, while Električni orgazam released the album titled Warszawa '81 for Jugoton in 1982. Also a support to the Polish opposition was expressed by the British punk rock band Angelic Upstarts.

The ties between the two scenes still exist. Vlada Divljan from Belgrade's Idoli and Darko Rundek from the Zagreb-based Haustor were invited as guests to the Yugoton project. They are featured on the photo on the CD cover of Yugoton together with the Polish artists.

Another Yugonostalgia project in Poland was Yugopolis.

[edit] Track listing

  1. Malcziki (feat. Kazik)
  2. Rzadko Widuje Cie Z Dziewczetami (feat. Kasia Nosowska & Pawel Kukiz)
  3. Dziewczeta W Letnich Sukienkach (feat. Ryszard "Tymon" Tymanski)
  4. Czarno-Bialy Swiat (feat. Kazik)
  5. Gdy Miasto Spi (Snem Kamiennym) (feat. Kasia Nosowska)
  6. Falochron (feat. Olaf Deriglasoff)
  7. Elektryczny Orgazm (feat. Kazik)
  8. To Byla Sobota (feat. Kasia Nosowska)
  9. Ema (feat. Pawel Kukiz)
  10. W Sercu Miasta (feat. Grzegorz Nawrocki)
  11. O Nic Nie Pytaj (Bo Nie Pytam Ja) (feat. Pawel Kukiz)
  12. 1000 Kawalkow (feat. Olaf Deriglsoff)

[edit] See also

[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
Languages