Tag Archives: Pula

(review) SAŠA 21-VD-i2(Dirty Old)

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Legendary Sale Veruda, guitar player and mastermind of legendary Croatian punk band Kud Idijoti is back with the second full length album by his new band Saša 21.

The one wrong thing, in my humble opinion is, that we all look at this band and listen to it, through the eternal prism of Sale`s former band and all of the hits they gave us prior to the untimely death of singer Tusta. Sale always remain in the shadow of bigger part of this life as songwriter and guitar player of Idijoti, so his new band is and always will be compared to his former glory days. It is not right, but I also do it. The songs on this album sound like they came out of Kud Idijoti factory, although Saša 21 plays boogie punkrock like they call it with lyrics in Croatian language. The lyrics are the problem of this album, because they are too few and too meaningless in most of the songs compared to the lyrical geniousness this man can provide. Also, the songs are too similar to one another and there are practically no punkrock anthemic choruses or guitar riffs that remain in memory long after the listening to the record. Do not get me wrong, this is quality punkrock, better played and written than many other bands in the scene, but in all, it is just average. Recommended songs: Jetra, Svi na kontejnere!, Razdvojenost.

https://dirtyoldempire.bandcamp.com/

 

 

(fanzines) Croatian hardcore punk zine OOPS #4 is out!

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During my growing up and formative years in the scene, there was no Internet, only letters, tape trading, later first cd trading and fanzines with their flyers, interviews and reviews were the only real source of information.

There are not much physical copies of the zines made in Croatian scene, heck even I am doing a webzine, which is easier and much more comfortable way to reach out to the scene, but I totally support the people who do old school zines because I did quite a number of them back in the days and I know how much work it takes to diy cut paste and copy those little fuckers hehe.

OOPS is short for Oštrom olovkom protiv sistema(English: Sharp pencil against the system) and it is done by dedicated hardcore punx from Pula, Croatia, younger generation which carries the flame of the scene on and on forward, never to get lost.  Zine is classic made, in black and white cut/paste style, and it looks really good. There is a Spermbirds review, an interview with excellent Spanish band Blowfuse, political non music piece about utopia and leftism, Pula hardcore punk bands info scene report, I didn˙t know there are so much new bands there and I am so happy for that fact. There is also a non music text about punk and fashion and that is about it. Short but sweet. The zine is in Croatian language, so if you like it, order your copy and write to:

lukasardoz@gmail.com

Instagram: pulahc

(book) Život s Idijotima-book about one of the most important punk bands from our scene and a document of a time gone by.

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I remember when I was a kid and went to Monte Paradiso festival in Pula for the first time ever back in 1997. I was fortunate that my band played the first day in Uljanik back then and I was so nervous because we opened the then four day event of punk hardcore in such a mythical place for me. Having grown up with punk bands from Pula such as Kud Idijoti, Fakofbolan, Frontalni udar, Think, Pasmaters and many others, I was honoured to be there, had awesome time. I always argued with my friend Lazar about which band is better Hladno Pivo or Kud Idijoti back in the days. He was always for Idijoti and my choice then was Pivo when they were still punk band, not the band they are today. Now I know I was wrong. Kud Idijoti never sold out. Kud Idijoti always kept their integrity, their ideals until the very end with singer Tusta passing away too soon!

This book is bassist Dr Fric´s reflection of the time spent in the one of the most important punk band of this region with a lot of anecdotes, stories, and can easily serve as excellent history document of punk and alternative scene of former Yugoslavia and later Croatia, with dark times of war and rising nationalism, when Kud Idijoti were a beacon of normal thought in times of thick darkness. The book is excellent in that part, but I was somehow disappointed with the ending. It ends too abruptly and without real closure, like it was cut and all those quotations of other people and contemporaries is no way to end this book. I felt somehow cheated not getting closure and the ending of the story no matter how hard and heartbreaking it could be. But, I guess Fric had reasons to write it that way. This book is inspirational, easy to read and fantastic document of the time I was in a way and still am part of. Get and read this one!