Oliver Mandic - Fato (Petko Turner's Slavic Funk Mix) Eastern Disco Funk Rock Free DL

Published: May 9, 2020, 10:29 p.m.

b'Oliver Mandi\\u0107 - Fato\\nA Slavic Funk Mix By Mr. Turner\\nhttps://hypeddit.com/track/5tf6e7\\n\\nOliver Mandi\\u0107 (Serbian Cyrillic: \\u041e\\u043b\\u0438\\u0432\\u0435\\u0440 \\u041c\\u0430\\u043d\\u0434\\u0438\\u045b; born 13 July 1953 in Titovo U\\u017eice, Serbia, Yugoslavia) is a Serbian and Yugoslav rock musician, composer, and producer.\\n\\nIn 1980, Mandi\\u0107 released his debut album, entitled Probaj me (Try Me), produced by Peter MacTaggart. All the songs were composed by Mandi\\u0107, and the lyrics were written by Marina Tucakovi\\u0107.[1] The album brought hits "Nije za nju" ("Not for Her"), "Samo nebo zna (Polude\\u0107u)" ("Sky Only Knows (I\'ll Go Crazy)") and rerecorded "Osloni se na mene". The album was promoted with a TV show Beograd no\\u0107u (Belgrade at Night), directed by Stanko Crnobrnja. The ambitiously avantgarde programme even won Rose d\'Or award at the 1981 Montreux TV festival. Mandi\\u0107\'s controversial androgynous image in the show, was conceived by his school mate and good friend Sla\\u0111ana Milo\\u0161evi\\u0107 who, after many days and nights spent in endless persuasions and discussions, finally put Oliver in touch with conceptual artist Kosta Bunu\\u0161evac who, she thought, would create the outwardly image for Oliver. This had raised quite a public furor due to the singer\'s cross-dressing and aggressive makeup. His androgynous image, which the Yugoslav audience found especially shocking in the early 1980s, attracted considerable media attention.\\n\\nIn 1982, Mandi\\u0107 released his second studio album, Zbog tebe bih tucao kamen (I Would Break Rocks for You). The album was recorded in Switzerland and produced by Mandi\\u0107 and MacTaggart.[3] It featured Nenad "Japanac" Stefanovi\\u0107 on bass guitar, \\u0110i\\u0111i Jankeli\\u0107 on drums, Aleksandar Milovanovi\\u0107 on guitar, Laza Ristovski on keyboards, Mi\\u0107a Markovi\\u0107 on saxophone, Stjepko Gut on trumpet, and Bebi Dol on backing vocals, and the cover art was designed by Mirko Ili\\u0107.[3] The album brought hits "Smejem se, a plakao bih" ("I\'m Laughing, but I Feel Like Crying"), "Neverne Bebe" ("Unfaithful Babies") and "Sve su seke jebene" ("All the Girls Have Been Fucked", with lyrics written after the motifs from Serbian erotic folk poetry collected by Vuk Stefanovi\\u0107 Karad\\u017ei\\u0107).\\n\\nIn 1984, Mandi\\u0107 appeared at the MESAM festival for the first time, performing the folk-inspired song "Pitaju me, pitaju" ("They\'re Asking Me, They\'re Asking"), for which the lyrics were written by Marina Tucakovi\\u0107. The same year Mandi\\u0107 produced D\\u02bc Boys album Muvanje (Hitting On).\\n\\nIn 1985, he released the album Do\\u0111e mi da vrisnem tvoje ime (I Feel like Screaming Your Name), which brought folk-inspired hits "Pomagajte drugovi" ("Help Me, My Friends"), with which he won the first place at the 1985 MESAM festival, and "Bobane" ("Oh, Boban..."). During the same year, Mandi\\u0107 took part in YU Rock Misija, Yugoslav contribution to Live Aid.'