S.A.R.S.
Sveže Amputirana Ruka Satrijanija | |
---|---|
Also known as | S.A.R.S. |
Origin | Belgrade, Serbia |
Genres | Alternative rock, pop rock, reggae, blues, jazz, ethnic music, hip hop |
Years active | 2006 – present |
Labels | Lampshade Media |
Associated acts | VHS, MVP, Discord, Mašta Bašta |
Members |
Aleksandar Luković Boris Tasev Nenad Đorđević Petar Milanović Sanja Lalić Tihomir Hinić Žarko Kovačević |
Past members |
Vladimir Popović Ivana Blažević Goran Mladenović Branislav Lučić Dragan Kovačević Miloš Bakalović Miloš Kovačević |
Sveže Amputirana Ruka Satrijanija (Serbian Cyrillic: Свеже ампутирана рука Сатријанија; trans. The Freshly Amputated Arm of Satriani), or S.A.R.S. for short, are a Serbian alternative rock band from Belgrade. Presenting a combination of pop rock, reggae, blues, jazz and hip hop with the ethnic music of Serbia, the band is one of the leading acts of the so-called New Serbian Scene.
History
The band was formed in March 2006 by Aleksandar Luković "Lukac" (guitar) and Dragan Kovačević "Žabac" (vocals) along with Vladimir Popović "Hobbo" (vocals), Žarko Kovačević "Žare" (vocals), Miloš Kovačević "Kriva" (bass guitar), Branislav Lučić "Beban" (percussion), Goran Mladenović "Japanac" (drums) and Ivana Blažević "Violina" (violin). All musicians came from a different music backgrounds and spheres of interest, resulting in unique fusion sound of divergent music genres.
Break up and huge success
After a few minor live appearances in 2007, including several performances at Belgrade clubs as well as the Niš performance as a part of the Mirovni Karavan (Peace Caravan) manifestation, the band had entered a crisis. At the time the band recorded the demo for the song "Buđav lebac" ("Molded Bread") at the Resnik RLZ, home made studio.
On early 2008, bassist Miloš Kovačević went to serve the army, drummer Mladenović and violinist Blažević had left the band, thus the band disbanded. After the break up, band's friend Siniša "Kum" decided to promote the song "Buđav lebac" by using internet guerrilla marketing. He created a simple video for the song and uploaded demo to YouTube. Without any mainstream media promotion, "Buđav lebac" made by anonymous band S.A.R.S. had become a top chart hit in Serbia and all other former Yugoslav republics.[1]
"Buđav lebac" meme phenomenon
"Buđav lebac" multi-layer meanings and catchy theme got it accepted by the broad audience. Song describes social contrasts and poor economic situation of ordinary man by using word play and black humor. Along with catchy melody and innovative voice performance, "Buđav lebac" became one of the most popular alternative tracks in ex Yugoslav countries. Budjav lebac created a huge public and social buzz without any mainstream media promotion. After initial guerrilla release, song share rate and success was compared with pandemics growth, interestingly corresponding with band's name S.A.R.S. "Buđav lebac" became offline and online meme.
The Serbian swimmer Nađa Higl stated that she had sung the song lyrics before the race in Rome where she became the World Champion in 200 m breaststroke, and the audience had sung the song to her at the Belgrade City Council plateau at the welcome ceremony.[2] At the other welcome ceremony in her home town Pančevo, Higl appeared on stage with S.A.R.S. who had been performing at the ceremony.[3] The song, with altered lyrics, was also sung by Delije, the fans of the football club Red Star Belgrade, due to the economic situation within the club.[4]
The first album - S.A.R.S.
"Buđav lebac" huge public success had encouraged the rest of the band to continue working. On mid-2008, bassist Miloš Kovačević returned from the army and the band once again entered the RLZ studio and recorded a several demos including the song "Ratujemo ti i ja" ("We are at War, You and Me"), with the new members Miloš Bakalović "Bakal" (drums) and Boris Tasev "Bora" (keyboards, accordion). During the late 2008, the band got an offer from the PGP-RTS record label to record their debut album.
The album recording sessions, done with the help of the producer Đorđe Miljenović Wikluh Sky, were finished within a couple of months, and the eponymous debut album S.A.R.S was officially released on March 2009. The song lyrics for the album had been written by the vocalists Kovačević and Popović, and the music and arrangements were done by Kovačević, Luković and Miljenović and guest appearances featured former Eyesburn frontman Nemanja Kojić (trombone on "Ratujemo ti i ja" and "Zubarka" ("The Dentist"), the multi-instrumentalist Aleksandar Sedlar Bogoev (bouzouki on the same tracks), Nikola Demonja (saxophone), Kanda, Kodža i Nebojša member Vladan Rajović (drums on "Zubarka") and the former band member Ivana Blažević "Violina" (violin on the track "Sindrom lidera male stranke" ("Syndrome Of A Minor Political Party Leader ")).[5]
Simultaneously with album release appeared the official video for the song "Buđav lebac". It was an animated video directed by the Serbian illustrator Aleksa Gajić. In the meantime, on early 2009, the band got the award on TV Metropolis for the greatest musical discovery in 2008.
Member departures and controversy
On mid-2009 after the first's album huge success, the original lineup suddenly changed. Transition from unknown alternative underground band to MTV featured pop band meant an earthquake. Original S.A.R.S. repertoire included hard rock, punk and heavy metal songs, not welcomed by broader audience. Original singers Dragan Kovačević and Vladimir Popović promoted anarchism and fight against authorities during the live plays. S.A.R.S. frequently performed poorly on stage because of musicians lack of discipline. All that will change over the night when the band became commercial.
Vocalist Dragan Kovačević became the band manager and band owner, his brother Žarko Kovačević became the lead singer. Dragan Kovačević carried out band rebuild expelling original lineup members and introducing new musicians to the band. Vocalist Popović, bassist Kovačević, percussionist Lučić, and drummer Bakalović left the band. Ex S.A.R.S. members together with ex S.A.R.S. violinist Blažević, formed a new band, VHS (an acronym for Very Heavy S.A.R.S.).[6] VHS continued to play harder sound performing in underground clubs. New S.A.R.S will change direction towards pop music in its future albums.
New members arrived, Nenad Đorđević "Đole" (bass guitar), Tihomir Hinić "Tihi" (drums), Petar Milanović "Pera" (trombone, saxophone) and Sanja Lalić (backing vocals).[7] New members appeared in the second SARS video, for the song "Debeli lad" ("Thick Shade").[8] On November of the same year, the band recorded the video for the song "Rakija" ("Brandy").[9] The later song,[10] along with "Buđav lebac",[11] was performed by the band in the Fajront Republika hosted by Zoran Kesić.
Tour and the second album
On October 2009, the band went on their first tour, performing at various Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian cities and towns, ended with a large concert at the Belgrade Youth Center. After the tour, the band entered the studio in order to record the material for the upcoming album. In the meantime, on March 2010, the band had a well-acclaimed performance at MTV.[12] Also, the band had recorded the soundtrack for the TV series Može i drugačije (It May Be Different), debuted on January 2010. At midnight on December 31, 2010, the band released their second studio album, Perspektiva (Perspective), released for free digital download at the MTV Adria official website.[13] In 2011, "Buđav lebac" was polled, by the listeners of Radio 202, one of 60 greatest songs released by PGP-RTB/PGP-RTS.[14] On June 27, 2012, S.A.R.S., alongside Public Enemy, Example, Jessie J, Dubioza Kolektiv and Orbital, performed on the first evening of the first Belgrade Calling festival.[15]
3rd Album - Kuća časti
In March 2013, the band released their third studio album, Kuća časti (On the House). The album, announced by the singles "Mir u svetu" ("World Peace"),[16] "Mitohondrija" ("Mitochondrion"), was released for free download via band's official site. The album featured numerous guest appearances, including the appearance of Montenegrin hip hop duo Who See.[17] In May, S.A.R.S. appeared on the tribute album to the band Brkovi entitled Brkati gosti (Guests with Mustaches) with a cover of Brkovi song "Naša mala zemlja" ("Our Little Country").[18] By the end of May 2013, the album Kuća časti overreached the number of 45.000 downloads.[19]
4th Album - Ikone pop kulture
In January 2014, the band released the album Ikone pop kulture (Pop Culture Icons). The album is available for free download from the band's official website.[20] At the same time, the band, together with the duo Dont, recorded and released as a single an English language version of "Buđav lebac", entitled "Moldy Bread".[21]
Discography
Studio albums
- S.A.R.S. (2009)
- Perspektiva (2011)
- Kuća časti (2013)
- Ikone pop kulture (2014)
- Proleće (2015)
Other appearances
- "Naša mala zemlja" (Brkati gosti, 2013)
References
- ↑ S.A.R.S. – Braća Kovačevići - Na krilima Lepca / POPBOKS.com
- ↑ Dnevni list Danas | Sport | Svetski doček za šampione
- ↑ Press Online :: [video] - A u Pančevu "Buđav lebac" za Nađu
- ↑ Buđav lebac i na Severu / Vesti - POPBOKS.com
- ↑ S.A.R.S.* - S.A.R.S. (CD, Album) at Discogs
- ↑ VHS - Very Heavy SARS | Facebook
- ↑ Sveže amputirana ruka Satrijanija Discography at Discogs
- ↑ YouTube - S.A.R.S. - Debeli lad ( zvanični spot )
- ↑ YouTube - S.A.R.S. - Rakija ( Zvanični Spot )
- ↑ YouTube - S.A.R.S. - Rakija Live@Fajront Republika
- ↑ YouTube - S.A.R.S. - Budjav Lebac (Unplugged @ Fajront republika, TV Fox)
- ↑ MTV Takeover: S.A.R.S – MTV Takeover – TV — MTV Srbija
- ↑ Besplatan download novog albuma grupe S.A.R.S. – Vijesti — MTV Hrvatska
- ↑ 60 хитова емисије ПГП на 202!, facebook.com
- ↑ "Prvi dan BC u znaku Džesi Džej"", b92.net
- ↑ "Video: S.A.R.S. - Mir u svetu", popboks.com
- ↑ "S.A.R.S. časte novim albumom", balkanrock.com
- ↑ "BRKOVI - Brkati gosti (Tribute to Brkovi)", nocturne.com
- ↑ "S.A.R.S. - album "Kuća časti" zabeležio 45 000 downloada", mtv.rs
- ↑ "S.A.R.S. objavili novi album “Ikone pop kulture”", balkanrock.com
- ↑ "„Буђав лебац” на енглеском језику", politika.rs
External links
- S
.A .R .S . official website - S.A.R.S. at Facebook
- S.A.R.S. at YouTube
- S.A.R.S. at Deezer
- S.A.R.S. at iTunes
- S.A.R.S. at Discogs
- S.A.R.S. at Last.fm
- S.A.R.S. at Rateyourmusic