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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Biography  





2 Music career  





3 Slobodan Kovačević's songs  





4 References  














Slobodan Kovačević






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Slobodan "Bodo" Kovačević (29 December 1946 – 22 March 2004) was one of the greatest rock guitarists in former Yugoslavia,[1] with unprecedented virtuosity even to this day. He began his musical career in the early sixties with the Sarajevo band "Wanderers" and few years later in the mid sixties joined Indexi, where Davorin Popović was already a singer.

Biography[edit]

His birth certificate is registered as Slobodan A. Kovačević, with the middle initial representing the name of his father Adem. During his musical career, he became widely known by his nickname "Bodo". He graduated with a degree in architecture from the University of Sarajevo, but his love for music won him over. He started his musical career in the early 1960s, first as a guitarist with Lutalice ("The Wanderers"), and from 1965 in the band Indexi, where he spent most of his career. In his spare time, he liked to paint, and watercolors were his favorite technique of expression.

In 1978, together with other members of Indexi, he received the prestigious April 6 Award from the city of Sarajevo. That same year, he won the JRT (Yugoslav Radio and Television) award for his thematic masterpiece concept album "Dark-Blue River", which was declared album of the year in Yugoslavia. In 2004, he received the Davorin Award for best instrumentalist in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Music career[edit]

He took his first musical steps as a high school student auditioning as a singer with well-known Yugoslavian composer-musician Kornelije Kovač (later a member of Indexi and leader of Korni Grupa). Only when he began taking guitar lessons with professor Mile Praljak was his true talent for guitar playing discovered.

He founded the group Lutalice ("The Wanderers") in 1963, which also included rhythmic guitarist Slobodan M. Kovačević (who later founded the group More), bassist Duško Čorlija, drummer Vojo Šimšić and vocalist Zoran Vidović - Cojo. Additional members were singers Selma Koluder and Gordana Magaš, who later became a well-known Sarajevo ballerina and choreographer. The second lineup consisted of bassist Fadil Redžić and drummer Miroslav Šaranović, both of whom later joined Indexi. A recording from this period is Slobodan Kovačević's first instrumental composition『Snježni kristali』(Snow Crystals), which was recorded in the studios of Radio Sarajevo on 16 April 1965.

Kovačević joined Indexi in the summer of 1965, and Fadil Redžić, his Lutalice bandmate, joined soon after. Both of them, along with the singer Davorin Popović, stayed in the band as core members until Popović's death 2001.

The first major composition Bodo Kovačević made for Indexi was titled『Pružam ruke』(I Reach Out), with lyrics by Nikola Borota. It was written in late 1966 and was recorded at Radio Sarajevo on 13 February 1967. With this composition, Indexi took part in the Yugoslav selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, which was organized in Ljubljana (the winner was Slovenian singer Lado Leskovar with Vse rože sveta).

The composition『Pružam ruke』(I Reach Out) is significant in Yugoslavia's pop-rock scene because it is considered to be the first domestically copyrighted pop/rock composition, and the first authentic pop/rock composition that has been played in their native language.

Slobodan Kovačević was the most prolific author in Indexi[citation needed], having written and produced many of their most significant songs, and led the group toward constant innovation and experimentation. Some of Indexi's biggest successes were written by Bodo himself ("Somewhere at the End of the Lull" with lyrics by Želimir Altarac Čičak, "Tide", "Dark-Blue River") or in cooperation with Fadil Redžić ("The World in Which I Live" with lyrics by Želimir Altarac Čičak, "Ballad").

Their most successful album was the 1978 concept album "Modra Rijeka" (The Dark-Blue River), based on the eponymous poem by Mak Dizdar. It was conceived by Slobodan Kovačević, who was also the author of almost all of the songs on the album. The album was co-produced by Nikola Borota, who became one of the most important music producers of the region.

Slobodan Kovačević had worked extensively for other artists and participated in various projects outside of pop and rock music . Among other things, he played guitar and participated in the arrangement of Josipa Lisac's first album, "Dnevnik jedne ljubavi" (Diary of a Love) in 1973. He composed the theme music for the ceremony of the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, collaborated with Esad Arnautalić on his project『Muzika razpoloženja』(Mood Music), wrote the music for the play "Mandragola" for "Chamber Theatre 55" in Sarajevo and "Posljednja potraga za zlatom" (Last Quest for Gold) for the National Theatre in Sarajevo. In the last two years of his life, he was the music producer of BH Eurosong.

At the beginning of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, he moved to Prague and returned to Sarajevo after the Dayton Agreement in 1995. In late March 1998, Indexi performed in Podgorica and Belgrade.

After the death of Davorin Popović in 2001, he devoted himself to jazz music and joined the Sinan Alimanović Quintet. He also played in the Dance Orchestra of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Slobodan Kovačević wrote a total of more than 300 compositions. Most of these opuses are associated with Indexi, but also with theater performances and songs for other artists.

Slobodan Kovačević died on 22 March 2004 in Sarajevo and was buried in the Bare Cemetery in the "Alley of Greats", close to his bandmate and singer Davorin Popović. From 2006, in his honor, the Bodo Kovačević Award was founded for the best guitarist.

He had been married to Edina Filipović since July 1981 and had a daughter, Hana.

Slobodan Kovačević's songs[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Slobodan Kovačević Photos, News and Videos, Trivia and Quotes - FamousFix". FamousFix.com. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
Awards and achievements
Preceded by

None

Pjesma Mediterana winner
1992
Succeeded by

Mićo Vujović


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Slobodan_Kovačević&oldid=1194220397"

Categories: 
1946 births
2004 deaths
Bosnia and Herzegovina rock guitarists
Bosnia and Herzegovina male guitarists
Yugoslav musicians
20th-century guitarists
20th-century male musicians
Burials at Bare Cemetery, Sarajevo
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This page was last edited on 7 January 2024, at 21:42 (UTC).

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