A new compilation put together by Nikola Vitkovic (as his independent endeavour) strives to highlight the buoyoant music scene of the troublesome period of Serbia’s history - the 1990s. It seems that the old maxim about art thriving in the age of general gloom is at play in this case as well. Nikola was, however, not interested in the country’s strong alternative indie scene (as an opposition to the state-supported turbofolk) but in the “genius freaks”, the talented and isolated (by their own will) dilettante. The album is divided into three parts depending on the time of inception - early 90s still heavily influenced by the preceding decade, mid-Nineties and the war, and late 90s. Each of these periods is manifest in the music itself, eg. the music made during the war with its almost “retarded” weirdness, a cathartic musical self-therapy. You can download the compilation for free.
What was the motivation behind compiling this list of songs? The real, initial motivation was the desire to release several albums of experimental music projects from 90s Serbia, for the first time in public. There are dozens of undiscovered experimental gems from that era, but I was specifically interested in escapist projects outside of any scene, people who nurtured their private “one man scenes” in isolation.
I knew that a contemporary listener, whose attention span has tragically shortened, wouldn’t know how to handle such obscure releases and difficult music. So I decided that, along with the full albums on CDr, I should make one free compilation of the 90s experimental music in Serbia and write a little essay about it. I wanted a compilation to provide a broader context for the albums, raise wider interest in the separate projects, and suggest that they should be regarded as parts of the bigger picture of the 90s Serbian under-underground and the psychopathology of its culture.
Can you describe the alternative independent music scene in the 90s in Serbia?
But I must point out that my answer to this question won’t be about the bands on crni pek compilation - they are outsiders from all scenes, and the following generalisations don’t apply to them :)
In the 90’s, serbian alternative music was very much driven by distorted guitars. As someone who grew up in the 80s, I remember being shocked with the overall erosion of standards in alternative music. Everyone was trying to sound like it’s 1976… or maybe they tried to sound like 91? To me, they sounded like 76 anyway. There was much anger, energy, frustration and “resistant” sentiments, but very little else.
In the 80s and before, there has always been a strong negative stereotype about electronic music as being soulless kitsch. When this conservative ‘technophobia’ was over with, our electronic musicians turned to techno. Techno was considered rubbish in the underground scene, because of it’s escapist and hedonistic lack of interest in anything other than drug-induced delirium. So, there was no electronics nor experimentation in the underground scene.
The good thing about the 90s was that the totalitarian situation gave us a sense that whatever we do, it’s leading us to some purpose, some hypothetical [metaphysical?] exit. There was this common urge to transcend ourselves into different occasions. And when you live in a permanent state of emergency, you set your priorities in craziest ways: partying was a priority, making guitar noise also, hanging out on concerts, drinking…
How did the war influence music? You mention that the most experimental bands appeared during the bombing…
The war influenced the media which selected and filtered the music, so we were served a very bipolar choice: be a turbo-folk war veteran [on the state governed media], or an “alternative” rebel [on the opposition’s media]. The majority of music fitted stricly in the respective styles of those two opposing ”philosophies” - you had countless metal/punk/rock/hc clones on one side, and turbofolkers on the other.
This “media dualism” had nothing to do with the expansion of experimental music during bombing. This phenomenon happened when people felt a physical shock of bombing, and realised just how easily they could die any minute, without having even tried to express themselves ever. It was a moment when the worldwide lunacy was confirmed, and that gave us an endless right to reject sanity. With the adrenaline rush and no school to go to, everyone went positively crazy.
You mentioned in the accompanying text, that alternative, rebellious music in the 90s was accepted better than smooth pop?
Throughout the 90s, alternative music has become the mainstream of urban culture, that is - young people, people in big cities and generally people who didn’t support the regime. The question of taste has become a question of politics - just as it has always been. There was this paradoxical situation when more people supported some third-grade punks than an easy pop band. People identified their dissatisfaction with provocative culture, like underground comics and lofi movies.
On the basis of that, we could have made the strongest alternative scene in history, but we didn’t! Although there was an enormous public interest in underground genres, almost all our bands sounded alike, which means - oldfashioned and stereotypical. there was no eccentricity, no courage to be original, no genius. except… in private rooms, where social freaks produced their gesamtkunstwerks, in isolation. Crni Pek is a compilation of those freaky geniuses, and it suggests that isolationism is better than populism, and that one’s isolationism [or freakdom] can be of much greater value to a society than populist. What we needed then, and now, are eccentrics who would care and dare to present themselves to the public, with no compromise.
According to what method did you put together the various tracks?
It wasn’t hard to select the tracks, i just tried to fit them in a good “mix”. Much harder was to select the projects which should be included. they had to be:
- unlike any popular alternative cliche music of the 90s
- intentionally isolated
- undiscovered even among the underground circles
- produced whole albums [some of them had more than 20 albums]
- created in the 90s and terminated in the 90s preferably
- serious about what they were doing and strict about the concept of that work [even if it’s sometimes just freaking out improvisation]
How does the 90ties alternative music scene differ to today’s alternative music scene in Serbia and what can it learn from that era?
The scene today is entirely different but all its weaknesses are the same: middle-of-the-road approach, trying to impress and satisfy the target audience, striving to be accepted, trying to sound like some foreign band… and no trace of originality, or authenticity stronger than a “heartfelt imitation”. In the 90s, urban culture needed rough and angry music to express their dissatisfaction. Since 2000, it needs a “European class quality” music, to confirm that we belong to the European culture.
The goals are different, but the mentality is the same, and it’s mediocre. I released the Crni Pek compilation to point out that creatively we are still where we were 20 years ago, and that we need real eccentric outsiders to take part in the public culture, to expose themselves for the first time bravely, shock us, scare us, disgust us, and save us from our middle-of-the-road downfall.
Toni Dimitrov is a mainstay in the Macedonian independent scene. He’s been a part of the brilliant Kanal 103 radio station (which we gatecrashed in autumn, more on that soon) for astonishing 14 years. He’s also a creator himself (tweaking field recordings collected during his many expeditions into Macedonia’s nature), and a curator (through his new label Post Global).
What’s the highlight for you in Macedonia’s music scene?
Last year was a key one in many ways, as well as music wise. There were many projects, events and artists worth mentioning and many that I was involved with:
- 20 years of existence of Kanal103, the radio that I have worked at for already 14 years. It is the most important music/culture media in Macedonia, responsible for the shape and existence of the contemporary music scene as we know it today, in charge of promoting most of the good artists that are still working on the scene today. It is behind most of the good events in Skopje and beyond. We celebrated this anniversary with a few events and festivals presenting the cream of the Macedonian music scene. Listen to us!
- I celebrated 10 years of existence of my radio show Post Global with a couple of events presenting local and international artists, culminating with the festival VICE VERSE which consisted of workshops, exhibitions, video screenings and live performances/dj sets by American, Serbian and local audio/video/visual artists. Plus the 1 year of existence of Music and Politics, another radio program that I’m involved in.
- Have to mention the label Greenfields that released 10 releases last year with international and local artists and diverse sounds. Last spring we did a tour through Macedonia presenting the artists and their work.
- Music and Politics started collaborating with the regional webzine BTurn.com and launched a series of events presenting regional and local artists. At the first party, Belgarade DJ lady Tijana T was promoted with her dj set as well as a local project Jerton. Second party in on the way with Jan Nemecek and Dimitar Dodovski, one of the best upcoming regional artists.
What is the low point for you in Macedonia’s music scene?
- Lowpoints are things that we have to deal with locally so I’m not sure if I want to talk about this and ‘promote’ them internationally. But if you insist the first thing I have to mention is the lack of communication and collaboration between the artists on the scene. Because in my opinion, the definition of the term scene is: SCENE = COMMUNICATION and COLLABORATION. Which does not exist here in the sense of consisting and building.
- Another low point is the lack of clubs. There are no clubs, that means there are no events, that means there is no audience, that means there is no scene! The scene is a live organism, each thing pulls another.
- The mass existence of cover bands is the result of the other already mentioned points. These bands have been playing the same 15 songs in each of the five clubs in the city for years already, but recently they became the only thing that is going on in the club scene. Same people have been going to the same places each day, listening to the same 15 songs every day for years already, and they are fine with it! That’s really sick and that’s not what we want our scene to look like. Of course, here I don’t want to mention the flood of Serbian rock/pop/turbofolk artists playing massive concerts in Skopje.
- The indolence of the audience. If you don’t have clubs and events, the audience is becoming indolent and they are rarely going to events, if at all. Usually they go to mainstream events with big commercial djs and pop concerts or where young people are at – cover bands gigs. Unfortunately that happened here, slowly killing the real artistic scene.
Discovery-new artist of the year /in Macedonia/?
- I will have to highlight Dimitar Dodovski, an artist that has released a couple of tracks and remixes on well known net labels in the dub techno scene like Tropic, Inuoki, Yuki Yaki, Greenfields and even Neo Ouiija, with a release planned for the Japanese label Lantern (Martin Shulte, Arctic Hospital, Taylor Deupree). His sound is deep and beat oriented with variations in minimal dub, dubtech, techno and house. Last year he had great live performance with a drummer. Really mighty experimental dubby but still dancey show.
- Herzel is one of the local artists signed on Greenfields worth mentioning. He also releases on another hard working label Filter. He has released a couple of releases on Greenfields and Filter getting worldwide attention with his experimental post dubstep sound. His upcoming vinyl release will be out soon on Other Heights.
- Disphilharmonia. The most exciting experimental live audio/video project. A laptop quartet with 3 boys and a girl. They also have really successful solo projects.
Autemu is the girl in the project. She already had a few releases on international labels.
-Delta M45. Two guys are behind this project: Dragoljub Curcic from Serbia (Subotica) and Goce Gligurovski from Macedonia (Bitola) making what is the true meaning of what we call kosmische musik. The perfect album for travelling, no matter if it is in the woods or in outer space. You can listen to it while sleeping and dreaming. Was created last summer during a live session. Coming up in early 2012 on my new label Post Global recordings!
The album of Delta M45 is definitely one of the tips and wishes as well as exact plans. I’m launching my new label Post Global recordings with their album Space Probe as a first release. Can’t wait! Followed by a collaboration release between my project sound_00 and Norwegian artist Iversen. Also got a great new electroacoustic/drone material for this collaboration. We collaborated here for the second time after the first self titled 7” released on Dirty Demos in UK.
After five years of hiatus, we have got together again on our new material, which consisted of drone/ambient pieces. The base of the material are field recordings made in untouched nature in the Macedonian mountains and villages during my trips/climbing, which were edited subsequently in a collaboration process between two artists coming from two different parts of the world. Part of this material will be released on Dirty Demos on a tape format and another part on the label I usually collaborate with Panospria in Canada. After that I’m planning releases from Sebastian Zangar and a re-release of Normal Music, which originally appeared on my first label Acid Fake.
Another of our yearly recaps this time with not one but two perspectives on the Slovak music scene. First Filip Drábek from the Exitab label, one of the most active imprints in Slovakia in terms of independent music at the moment and second one is a collective answer from the BWO collective, purveyors of urban dance music in the country.
What’s the highlight for you in Slovakia’s music scene? Following the relatively turbulent year 2010 when quite a lot of interesting projects emerged, at least in my opinion, the “scene” experienced a sort of hiatus when it comes to new names. On the other hand, a lot of projects from the previous year delivered their proper debut releases: Pjoni & Ink Midget’s album, Gwerkova’s record as well asJelly Belly’s EP. The opening of the new cultural space Nástupiště 1-12 in Topoľčany is also one of the highlights, connecting music, arts and film with the public space of a bus station exposing passers-by to indenpendent culture.
Gwerkova - NADA by gwerkova What is the low point for you in Slovakia’s music scene? The strange circumstances surrounding the loss of the independent collective A4’s Bratislava space. Interestingly, their theatre performances will take place in the premises of the Polish Institute in January. The fact that the Polish provide asylum to Slovak artists in Slovakia’s capital is nice, but sad at the same time.
The Tabačka independent cultural centre in Košice in the east of the country had some funding problems in the beginning of the year and the situation surrounding the European City of Culture 2013 project in the same town is also appalling. The dissolution of the Bratislava-based band Hvozd was also one of the low points of the year for me.
Discovery-new artist of the year /in Slovakia/? The biggest current discovery is not Slovak, but Bratislava-based English producer Aches who brilliantly merges his woozy guitar strings with beats in an abstract-shoegazy way. The audiovisual project Lowii is also promising. Finally, I’ve managed to check out the Žilina sludge duo Möbius who together with Prešov-based Dawn To Come have managed to lay the foundations of this type of music in Slovakia over the past few months. I also liked some of the releases of the Senica-based hip hop label Tvoja Matka Rekorc, such as 31’s debut EP.
Personal tips and wishes and plans for 2012? I would be glad if our label managed to maintain the busy release schedule of the last year. It would be also great if other labels started to be more active or new ones appeared. I would appreciate if A4 could find a new space and Tabačka and Stanica in Žilina would keep up their good work and people would stop being scared of going to gigs to the Obluda club in Bratislava.
I’m looking forward to the electroacoustic solo LP of Pjoni and the debut EP by Dawn To Come and hope that Teapotand Herzog Herzog will manage to finish their albums, too. It would be nice if I would know about a Slovak release that I couldn’t wait to hear but wouldn’t be on our label. Youcocoperhaps?
BWO
What’s the highlight for you in Slovakia’s music scene? Lot of parties with music, which a few years ago were in a minority in Bratislava (urban/dubstep, post-xy, dance music in general). Also, the increasing number of collectives around various genres, pop-up events at off spaces (studios, bars, flats), interesting and globally listenable local digital releases.
What is the low point for you in Slovakia’s music scene? Lack of venues, overabundance of similar events (see above), events clashing on the same dates, less people going to events, the ratio of attending guests on social networks vs the real attendance in clubs (more FB attendees than actual party-goers)
Tom Wilson is a British Bucharest based journalist, BBC radio correspondent and DJ and one of our connections in the city while we were there on our exploration journey in 2010.
What’s the highlight for you in Romania’s music scene? The highlight of my year had to be either the Rokolectiv festival or Romania’s continuing global take-over of the charts with Europop artists like Inna, Radio Killer and Alexandra Stan. You literally couldn’t turn on the radio in the UK or the US without hearing one of them - which is a truly great thing for Romania.
It’s better ‘nation branding’ than anything that could be dreamed up by some ad agency. I know it’ll wind people up if I say that Alexandra Stan’s ”Get Back (ASAP)” was the highlight of my year instead of some obscure netlabel release, but for me, piano-driven laminated europop with utterly incomprehensible lyrics just doesn’t get any better than this.
What is the low point for you in Romania’s music scene? The low point of the year was the fact that there wasn’t some kind of horrific plague that struck down Romanian parliamentarians that caused them to expire in indescribable agony.
Discovery-new artist of the year /in Romania/? There’s lots to chose from: Montgomery Clunk has had a great year, and is probably my number one Romanian artist at the moment. Also, the Legendary 1979 Orchestra deserves a mention for having a nice vinyl release, and boys from Future Nuggets put out the superb ”Forever Unreleased” which has introduced lots of fantastic new producers to the world.
Local Records also put out some great bits and pieces, with an honorable mention going to Rusu and Flore for their debut EP under the ‘Poor Relatives’ moniker, which deserves to get much more press - it’s a release that really rewards repeat listening.
The Future Nuggets guys also unearthed a producer called Rodion who’s been making music for the past 40 years or something. I’m not sure if I’m allowed to chose music from the mid-1970s as my Best New Artist, but I can’t wait to hear what other bits of his stuff they’re going to put out.
Another of our 2011 recaps this time with acclaimed Czech journalist and writer Karel Veselý, author and editor of books including Hudba ohně (Fire Music: Radical Black Music From Jazz to Hip Hop and Beyond) and Kmeny.
What’s the highlight for you in Czech Republic’s music scene? It’s nice to see people doing their own thing without the support from the big labels and also defying expectations from their fans. The highlight of 2011 in our music scene is the uncompromising hallucinogenic hip hop of Hugo Toxxx on his Legální drogy (Legal drugs) released on his own label Hypno 808.
The newcomer of the year must be the one-man anonymous project Kittchen on his album Menu made available from his website.
One sign of the good health of the scene is the demand for vinyl and physical products in general – Kittchen was made as an album on vinyl by his fans, Floex’s second album Zorya sold out on vinyl within few weeks and the same thing happened to my books (Hudba ohne, Kmeny).
What is the low point for you in Czech Republic’s music scene? Racism on the hip hop scene (Hrobka & Pitva, reactions to LA4’s video Nadzemí with Gypsy actors in it). The music awards (Anděl, Žebřík) dominated by major label / radio / lowest common denominator crap. People being stuck in their own music scenes without any interest in what is going on elsewhere.
Discovery-new artist of the year /in Czech Rep./? Apocalyptic lo-fi pop of Kittchen on Menu. Prodavač (ex-Sporto) on his Duchové EP
Personal tips and wishes and plans for 2012? That we can finally witness the world change this year. I really hope that I am wrong to predict that the fall of consumerist capitalist culture will make place for new fascism. As for me: I hope to spend less time with useless shit like making money and more with things that really matter (such as my long delayed novel and my children).