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#Tajči
eurovisionart · 9 months
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Tajči - Hajde da ludujemo
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oko-moje-sanjivo · 1 year
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Tajči, "Bube su u glavi", 1991
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exyusimp · 1 year
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Which one of y’all said this
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eurovision-facts · 1 year
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Eurovision Fact #255:
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Yugoslavia's 1990 representative Tajči from Croatia celebrated the 30th anniversary of her Eurovision entry 'Hajde Da Ludujemo' on her YouTube channel in 2020. She and many friends sang the song as Tajči held up two silver balloons - a three and a zero - at the end of the performance.
[Sources]
Zagreb 1990 Participants: Tajci, Eurovision.tv.
Tajci, Wikipedia.com.
Hajde da ludujemo 2020 - Tajci & Friends, YouTube.com.
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hetapeep41 · 1 year
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33 years ago since Tajči won Jugovizija.
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baezdylan · 2 months
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I PRESENT TO YOU -> MY RECORD COLLECTION:
A Day At The Races (1976) - Queen
All Systems Go (1987) - Donna Summer
Azra (1980) - Azra
Berlin (1973) - Lou Reed
Besane noći (1988) - Magazin
Bitanga i princeza (1979) - Bijelo Dugme
Blonde on Blonde (1966) - Bob Dylan
Boy (1980) - U2
Bridge Over Troubled Water (1970) - Simon and Garfunkel
Ćiribiribela (1988) - Bijelo Dugme
Eto! Baš Hoću! (1976) - Bijelo Dugme
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1963) - Bob Dylan
Gore iznad oblaka (1987) - Tutti Frutti Band
Grupa Zana (1988) - Zana
Hajde da ludujemo (1990) - Tajči
Live At The Bowl '68 (1987) - The Doors
Magical Mystery Tour (1967) - The Beatles
Nebeske Kočije (1988) - Novi Fosili
Paket aranžman (1981) - Električni Orgazam, Idoli, Šarlo Akrobata
Pearl (1971) - Janis Joplin
Pokvarena mašta i prljave strasti (1981) - Riblja Čorba
Primitive Cool (1987) - Mick Jagger
Prodavnica tajni (1988) - Bajaga i Instruktori
Rank (1988) - The Smiths
Revolver (1966) - The Beatles
The River (1980) - Bruce Springsteen
Rubber Soul (1965) - The Beatles
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) - The Beatles
Speaking in Tongues (1983) - Talking Heads
Street Legal (1978) - Bob Dylan
Šta bi dao da si na mom mjestu (1975) - Bijelo Dugme
Tonight (1984) - David Bowie
True Blue (1986) - Madonna
The Wall (1979) - Pink Floyd
Živo i akustično (1996) - Električni Orgazam
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eurovision-revisited · 2 months
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Eurovision 2003 - Number 47 - Maja Blagdan - "Moje ime je ljubav"
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2003 finds Maja Blagdan, relatively speaking, in the shadows of the Croatian music scene. After hitting the highest note in Eurovision history and taking Croatia to 4th place she had several years of fame and fortune before her star began to wane. What better way to try to turn that around then entering Dora again and giving it another go?
She's teamed up with song-writer Zrinko Tutić again, a prolific Dora song-writing entrant who she worked with before on her Eurovision entry in 1996. He also wrote all-time Eurovision classic Hajde Da Ludujemo for Tajči in 1990 as well as Yugoslavia's 1986 entry Željo Moja for Doris Dragović. This singer/song-writing partnership has pedigree.
Moje ime je ljubav (My Name is Love) is a song that revisits the past but detours through Asia along the way. There's that high note in the finale, just like in 1996, although Maja doesn't quite hit the heights she did in the past. The Asian flute motif crops up at the beginning and after the first chorus although that influence doesn't mesh with the rest of the song. I'm not sure what it's doing there.
Everything else is power-ballad-love-song-with-key-change. It may not quite be a Frankenstein-ed collage of Eurovision moments, not quite cookie cutter, copypasta - but it feels very familiar. It's pleasant and Maja does get to show off her vocal chops once, more. But it's definitely not anything new and that showed in the result. Although Maja made it through the semi-final, in the final she finished last. 12th place from the 12 finalists. Her schtick is a bit too old hat for Dora in 2003.
Maja's career revival would have to come from another source. And it did. A few years after this, she participated in Zvijezde pjevaju, a Croatian reality TV show that paired professional singers with famous celebs, sing duets and compete against other pairings. In the first season, Maja finished second (to another Eurovision alumnus...) and went on to compete three more times after that. Plus she hasn't given up on Dora quite yet. There may be more Maja to come.
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mishkakagehishka · 1 year
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Hi.
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babolat85 · 2 years
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MY FAVOURITE EUROVISION ENTRIES: DAY 52 - Yugoslavia
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And with Yugoslavia I reach the end of my list. 52 countries have participated in the Eurovision Song Contest since its beginning in 1956.
There were a few Yugoslav entries I like, including Tajči in 1990 with Hajde da ludujemo and Baby Doll - Brazil but today I had to go with their winning song from 1989 where they were the underdog going into the contest.
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It’s been interesting going through the countries that have participated, and while the number of countries competing next year looks to be on the low side, I hope more countries will return or maybe we will see the debut of some new countries in the contest.
PREVIOUS COUNTRIES:
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia & Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
Morocco
Netherlands
North Macedonia
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Serbia
Serbia & Montenegro
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Turkey
Ukraine
United Kingdom
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vs-redemption · 2 years
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As someone with an eurovision tattoo, I think I'm qualified enough to talk about this 😅.
Eurovision is a wonderful mess.
Europeans yelling at each other trough music, cursing at countries only, crewing other countries over with voting and all collectively rooting against the UK when it comes last again. Yes it is high in betting odds, but I believe in my fellow Europeans that we can give UK 0 points again. It's tradition!
Though Eurovision has a fascinating history! It started in 1956 to bring Europe together again after the wars. At first mainly Western Europe participated, then in 1961 Yugoslavia debuted, making it the only communist country to participate. The Soviet Union didn't like that the country became close with the West but that's a different story! Yugoslavia actually won the contest in 1989 (with Rock me by Riva), making it the first and last communist country to win.
In 1974 the legendary band ABBA won with Waterloo. ABBA is well known for their musical and movie Mamma Mia and its sequel. Funfact this was Swedens first win, so they won with a Classic!
In 1987 Johnny 'Mr Eurovision' Logan won the contest for the second time, he also wrote the 1992 winning entry 'Why Me' he is the only winner that won multiple times, though many have tried.
In 1993, the first ever pre-qualifiers were held in Ljubljana, Slovenia. 7 countries wanted to debut in Euroviaion, the EBU (broadcaster) didn't want that many new nations, so the qualifiers were held. Slovakia, Romania, Estonia, Hungary, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia took part, the last 3 countries qualified for Eurovision. The other 4 debuted with Poland and Lithuania the year after.
There have been many political songs but I wanted to talk about Bosnias Eurovision song that year. Sva Bol Svijeta, all the pain in the world. At that time Bosnia was at war. Sarajevo (capital) was under siege. Europe watched as it didn't want to get involved. So the band Fazla, sung about the war, how they wouldn't give up, halfway trough the song they turned their back at Europe, The same way Europe did at Bosnia. To this day that song makes me cry. The band and spokesperson, who was in Sarajevo giving their points got alot of applause for this.
Well some fun facts
Serbia won the year they debuted in 2007
Portugals 1974 song became the signal against their dictator weeks after the contest.
Lucia Moniz (Portugal 1996) was in the classic Christmas movie, Love Actually. She played the Portugese Love interest of Jamie, the writer. She was also the highest result for Portugal until they won in 2017. Making it the longest wait to win in Eurovision! Now that title belongs to Iceland.
The youngest winner was a 13 year old girl, who lied that she was 15. Sandra Kim from Belgium.
Eurovision is sometimes called the gay superbowl and is more watched than the sport.
3 songs were performed in a made up language (Belgium did that twice and NL followed its neighbor in 2006)
I always root against my country.
Some countries almost won on their first attempt, and for some it's still their best result
Lithuania best result is a joke entry (2006, we are the winners, wich came 6th)
Joke entries are the best and the Baltics are the kings of the jokes.
The presenters of the 2008 contest got married in 2012
The presenter of the 2006, 50 years of eurovision made a joke that Finland would not win if they kept screaming, couple of weeks later Finland won, with a screaming band (Lordi)
Moldova is the meme country (epic sax guy, door meme...
The UK gets voted last as a joke by the rest of Europe.
Euroviaion had a mascot in 1990, called Eurocat. Never saw that again.
Some of my favorite entries if you want to check them out
Hajde da Ludujemo by Tajči 1990
Tih dezeven dan by 1x band 1993
Nekonecna Piesen by Tublatanka 1994
Romeo by Ketil Stokkan 1986
My Star by Brainstorm 2000
Honestly I could go on and on about eurovision and I might send another ask in the morning about Eurovision, but its 3 am and I'm tired!
-Enis
Wow Enis! You really know a lot about it!! I’ll look at some of your favorites later. I’m excited! I can’t believe it has so much history. Thank you so much for sharing your wisdom! 💖
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manitat · 5 months
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Pesme Evrovizije - SFRJ 1961-1991.
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1961: Ljiljana Petrović - Neke davne zvezde
1962: Lola Novaković - Ne pali svetla u sumrak
1963: Vice Vukov - Brodovi
1964: Sabahudin Kurt - Život je sklopio krug
1965: Vice Vukov - Čežnja
1966: Berta Ambroz - Brez besed
1967: Lado Leskovar - Vse roze sveta
1968: Luci Kapurso & Hamo Hajdarhodžić - Jedan dan
1969: Ivan & 4M - Pozdrav svijetu
1970: Eva Sren - Pridi, dala ti bom cvet
1971: Krunoslav Slabinac - Tvoj dječak je tužan
1972: Tereza Kesovija - Muzika i ti
1973: Zdravko Čolic - Gori vatra
1974: Korni grupa - Generacija '42.
1975: Pepel in kri - Dan ljubezni
1976: Ambasadori - Ne mogu skriti svoju bol
1981: Seid Memić Vajta - Lejla
1982: Aska - Halo, halo
1983: Danijel Popović - Džuli
1984: Vlado & Izolda - Ciao, amore
1986: Doris Dragović - Željo moja
1987: Novi fosili - Ja sam za ples
1988: Srebrna krila - Mangup
1989: Riva - Rock Me
1990: Tajči - Hajde da ludujemo
1991: Bebi Dol - Brazil
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transsherlock · 2 years
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when u get this, list 5 songs u like to listen to, publish. then, send this ask to 10 of your favorite followers
What I listen to changes all the time, but these are my current favs:
Landslide - Fleetwood Mac
Jackson - Trixie Mattel feat. Orville Peck
Wig In A Box - Stephen Trask (from Hedwig And The Angry Inch)
Hajde Da Ludujemo - Tajči
The Worrying Kind - The Ark
Thanks for the ask btw :]
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maschasrankings · 2 years
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1990: Top 22
Spain: Azúcar Moreno - Bandido
Israel: Rita - Shara Barchovot
Denmark: Lonnie Devantier - Hallo Hallo
Yugoslavia: Tajči - Hajde Da Ludujemo
Portugal: Nucha - Há Sempre Alguém
Sweden: Edin-Ådahl - Som En Vind
Ireland: Liam Reilly - Somewhere In Europe
Finland: Beat - Fri?
Italy: Toto Cutugno - Insieme: 1992
France: Joëlle Ursull - White And Black Blues
Cyprus: Haris Anastasiou - Milas Poli
Luxembourg: Céline Carzo - Quand Je Te Rêve
United Kingdom: Emma - Give A Little Love Back To The World
Iceland: Stjórnin - Eitt Lag Enn
Germany: Chris Kempers & Daniel Kovac - Frei Zu Leben
Greece: Christos Callow & Wave - Horis Skopo
Belgium: Philippe Lafontaine - Macédomienne
Switzerland: Egon Egemann - Musik Klingt In Die Welt Hinaus
Norway: Ketil Stokkan - Brandenburger Tor
Turkey: Kayahan - Gozlerinin Hapsindeyim
Austria: Simone - Keine Mauern Mehr
Netherlands: Maywood - Ik Wil Alles Met Je Delen
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exyusimp · 3 years
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Who wouldn’t laugh along with her
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eurovision-facts · 1 year
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Eurovision Fact #313:
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Most of the contestants representing Yugoslavia were from Croatia. 12 out of the 27 representatives were from the nation either entirely or partly (meaning a single member of a group was from the nation, or the person was a combination of nationalities).
The demographic breakdown is as follows:
8 were from Serbia:
Ljiljana Petrović (1961), Lola Novakovic (1962), Zdravko Čolić (1973)**, Korni (1974), Aska (1982), Vlado and Isolda (1984)****, Bebi Dol (1991), and Ekstra Nena (1992).
12 were from Croatia:
Vice Vukov (1963, 1965), Luci Kapurso and Hamo Hajdarhodzic (1968), Ivan (1969), Krunoslav Slabinac (1971), Tereza (1972)*, Danijel (1983)***, Vlado and Isolda (1984)****, Doris Dragović (1986), Novi Fosili (1987), Srebrna Krila (1988), Riva (1989), and Tajči (1990).
4 were from Bosnia & Herzegovina:
Sabahudin Kurt (1964), Zdravko Čolić (1973)**, Ambasadori (1976), and Seid-Memic Vajta (1981).
4 were from Solvenia:
Berta Ambrož (1966), Lado Leskovar (1967), Eva Sršen (1970), and Pepel in kri (1975).
1 was from Montenegro:
Danijel (1983)***.
[Sources]
*I couldn't find information on where Tereza was from, so I assume she's Croatian because she sang in Croatian. Please let me know if you have a source for what her nationality is!
**Zdravko Čolić is Bosnian-Serbian.
***Danjiel is Montenegrin-Croatian.
****One member of Vlado and Isolda is from Serbia, and the other is from Croatia.
Yugoslavia, Eurovision.tv.
Ljiljana Petrović, Wikipedia.org.
Lola Novakovic, Wikipedia.org.
Vice Vukov, Wikipedia.org.
Sabahudin Kurt, Wikipedia.org.
Berta Ambrož, Wikipedia.org.
Biografija, LadoLeskovar.si.
Dubrovački Trubaduri, Wikipedia.org.
Ivan + 3M, Eurovisionuniverse.com.
Eva Sršen, Wikipedia.org.
Krunoslav Slabinac, Wikipedia.org.
Eurovision 1972 Yugoslavia: Tereza - "Muzika I Ti," Eurovisionworld.com.
Zdravko Čolić, Wikipedia.orh.
Korni, Eurovisionuniverse.com.
Pepel In Kri, Wikipedia.org.
Ambasadori, Wikipedia.org.
Seid-Memic Vajta, Wikipedia.org.
Viktorija (singer), Wikipedia.org.
Izolda Barudžija, Wikipedia.org.
Daniel (Montenegrin Singer), Wikipedia.org.
Vlado and Isolda, Wikipedia.org.
Doris Dragović, Wikipedia.org.
Novi fosili, Wikipedia.org.
Srebrna Krila, Wikipedia.org.
Riva (band), Wikipedia.org.
Tajči, Wikipedia.org.
Bebi Dol, Wikipedia.org.
Ekstra Nena, Wikipedia.org.
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hetapeep41 · 9 months
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Moments I'll keep with me forever. Balkan edition day 1,2 and a small bit of 3 :
- Recognised 2 maybe 3 songs during our first stop
- Tour guide loved my tattoo of the bridge, we talked about Bosnia and my love for the nation for a good 10 minutes. That same tour guide then saw my tattoo of Hajde and sung the 'Hajde da ludujemo ove noci' part. He then showed and told our driver about the tattoos
- Cried when I entered Mostar, I then cried again when I saw the bridge
- Our tour guide asked me if he could tell our city guide about my tattoos. She gushed over them and asked if she could take pictures, she then said "you are more of a local than I am."
- Everyone in Mostar was so friendly
- Saw someone with a rainbow bag, when I passed them and we made eye contact, I grabbed my rainbow bracelet and they grabbed their bag and we sorta did a fist bump, like I see you fellow queer
- Ate good food while my favorite radio station was on, i was looking at the bridge, then randomly Moj Mali je opasan by Tajči (my favorite singer and artist of who i have a different song tattood, she also follows me on instagram) played
- They talked about making a quiz about the Balkans for the bus ride, then the tour guide said 'it's a battle for second place, because no one is winning against Enis'
- Randomly spotted Zlatko Dalic (Croatian football coach, leader of my team) on a advertisement
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