[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Na izvoru svetlosti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Na izvoru svetlosti
Studio album by
Released1975
Recorded4–7 February 1975, Akademik Studio, Ljubljana
2 January 1974, Belgrade Sports Hall, Belgrade
Genre
LabelZKP RTLJ
ProducerRobert Nemeček
Ivo Umek
Pop Mašina chronology
Kiselina
(1973)
Na izvoru svetlosti
(1975)
Put ka Suncu
(1976)

Na izvoru svetlosti (trans. At the Spring of Light) is the second and the last studio album by Yugoslav progressive rock band Pop Mašina, released in 1975.

Background and recording

[edit]

The album was recorded from September 4–7, 1975 in Akademik Studio in Ljubljana, with the exception of the blues track "Negde daleko", recorded on the band's performance in Belgrade Sports Hall on 2 January 1974.[1] It was produced by the band's bass guitarist and vocalist Robert Nemeček and Ivo Umek.[1] The album featured guest appearances by S Vremena Na Vreme member Ljuba Ninković and keyboardist and composer Sloba Marković. Both of them appeared as guests on Pop Mašina's previous album, Kiselina (Acid).[1]

The song "Rekvijem za prijatelja" ("Requiem for a Friend"), with lyrics written by Ljuba Ninković, was dedicated to Predrag Jovičić, the vocalist of the band San, who earlier that year died from an electric shock on a concert in Čair Sports Center in Niš.[1] The song was musically inspired by Johann Sebastian Bach's choral composition and featured a string quartet.[1] The album featured a new version of the song "Zemlja svetlosti", previously released on a 7-inch single.[1]

Track listing

[edit]
Side A
No.TitleAuthorLength
1."Vreme za nas" ("Time for Us")Robert Nemeček5:55
2."Negde daleko" ("Somewhere Far Away")Zoran Božinović6:46
3."Rekvijem za prijatelja" ("Requiem for a Friend")Ljuba Ninković, Nebojša Ignjatović, Robert Nemeček, Sloba Marković4:11
Side B
No.TitleAuthorLength
1."Sećanja" ("Memories")Zoran Božinović4:24
2."Na izvoru" ("At the Spring")Zoran Božinović5:11
3."Zemlja svetlosti" ("Land of Light")Robert Nemeček6:09
4."Kraj II" ("End II")Robert Nemeček1:27

Personnel

[edit]

Additional personnel

[edit]
  • Ljuba Ninkovič – acoustic guitar, percussion
  • Sloba Marković – organ, piano, synthesizer
  • Anton Čare – cello
  • Stane Demšar – cello
  • Božo Mihelčič – violin
  • Karel Žužek – violin
  • Franjo Bergar – oboe
  • Ivo Umek – producer
  • Miro Bevc – engineer
  • Marko Petretič – recording assistant
  • Aca Radojčić – recording ("Negde daleko")
  • Mile Miletić – mixing ("Negde daleko")
  • Jugoslav Vlahović – cover, graphic design

Reissues

[edit]

The album was reissued in 2008, on vinyl, by Austrian record label Atlantide.[1]

Legacy

[edit]

In 2021 the song "Sećanja" was ranked No.58 on the list of 100 Greatest Yugoslav Hard & Heavy Anthems by web magazine Balkanrock.[2]

Covers

[edit]

The song "Zemlja svetlosti" was covered by Serbian alternative rock band Disciplina Kičme on their 1991 album Nova iznenađenja za nova pokolenja (New Surprises for New Generations).[3]

The song "Sećanja" ("Memories") was covered by Serbian singer-songwriter Nikola Čuturilo on his 2011 album Tu i sad (Here and Now), the track featuring guest appearance by Vidoja Božinović, a member of Pop Mašina's last lineup and Čuturilo's former bandmate from Riblja Čorba.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Janjatović, Petar (2024). Ex YU rock enciklopedija 1960–2023. Belgrade: self-released / Makart. p. 239.
  2. ^ "Metalni radnici: 100 najvećih YU hard & heavy himni", Balkanrock.com
  3. ^ "Disciplina Kičme – Nova Iznenađenja Za Nova Pokoljenja at Discogs". Discogs. 1991. Retrieved February 22, 2011.
  4. ^ ""Čutura ima novi album nakon šest godina", timemachinemusic.org". Archived from the original on March 10, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2013.
[edit]