EDO Maajka Albums - No Sikiriki, Stig'o Umur, Balkansko a Na E, Slu Aj Mater (Paperback)


Commentary (music and lyrics not included). Chapters: No Sikiriki, Stig'o umur, Balkansko a Na e, Slu aj Mater. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 23. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: No Sikiriki is Edo Maajka's second album. No Sikiriki, both the album name and the song, refers to how life is good and that there are no worries, but the majority of the album is not like the album name, but instead "I've had it up to my head with the world, but I still could go in the studio and record." Ruke Gore is a club song. The song Legenda O Elvisu" is about a love triangle and a young black Bosnian. Prziiiii is about a man named Dennis who rose quickly into a singing career and also fell quickly but still kept playing his harmonica on the streets. Dragi Moj Vlado is a song with seemingly childish beats but is about the political situation in Bosnia with a lot of repeating of the word "jebo" (fuck) in the chorus. The song On Je Mlai is about a Croat boy and Serbian girl who get together to the dismay of the boy's father who is a war veteran and at the end he kills himself. The song Obeana Rije is about a Srebrenica war veteran who becomes a hitman after losing everything in the war and kills for money with his beretta, but would never kill a person from Srebrenica for any kind of money. No Sikiriki is a war album, not so much about war but what the war did to Bosnians, parents who hate other nations, professional killers (soldiers) who began a carrier in the front lines, Balkan people scattered all around the world, "rode" (storks) who don't want to bring their young back home where bullets fly. The Album is opened by the recreation Sevdah O Rodama and ends in the song Mater Vam Jebem which is a strong and aggressive song that wants to prove that it is never going to get better for Bosniaks, Serbs ...http: //booksllc.net/?id=1645623

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Commentary (music and lyrics not included). Chapters: No Sikiriki, Stig'o umur, Balkansko a Na e, Slu aj Mater. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 23. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: No Sikiriki is Edo Maajka's second album. No Sikiriki, both the album name and the song, refers to how life is good and that there are no worries, but the majority of the album is not like the album name, but instead "I've had it up to my head with the world, but I still could go in the studio and record." Ruke Gore is a club song. The song Legenda O Elvisu" is about a love triangle and a young black Bosnian. Prziiiii is about a man named Dennis who rose quickly into a singing career and also fell quickly but still kept playing his harmonica on the streets. Dragi Moj Vlado is a song with seemingly childish beats but is about the political situation in Bosnia with a lot of repeating of the word "jebo" (fuck) in the chorus. The song On Je Mlai is about a Croat boy and Serbian girl who get together to the dismay of the boy's father who is a war veteran and at the end he kills himself. The song Obeana Rije is about a Srebrenica war veteran who becomes a hitman after losing everything in the war and kills for money with his beretta, but would never kill a person from Srebrenica for any kind of money. No Sikiriki is a war album, not so much about war but what the war did to Bosnians, parents who hate other nations, professional killers (soldiers) who began a carrier in the front lines, Balkan people scattered all around the world, "rode" (storks) who don't want to bring their young back home where bullets fly. The Album is opened by the recreation Sevdah O Rodama and ends in the song Mater Vam Jebem which is a strong and aggressive song that wants to prove that it is never going to get better for Bosniaks, Serbs ...http: //booksllc.net/?id=1645623

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Books + Company

Country of origin

United States

Release date

October 2010

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

October 2010

Editors

,

Creators

Dimensions

152 x 229 x 2mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

24

ISBN-13

978-1-158-37583-7

Barcode

9781158375837

Categories

LSN

1-158-37583-2



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