Description

Book Synopsis

The book traces the story of how a song recorded in 1981 by a young punk rock band from a cultural backwater on the English-Welsh border, and released on a tiny independent record label, became famous in a Yugoslavia formed in the image of Marshall Tito? Why was it 30 years before the members of the band found out? How did this ‘socialist’ country have one of the most vibrant punk scenes in the world?

Gloucester, England, 1981; multi-racial, teenage street-punk band, Demob, recorded and released what would become their best known and most enduring song, No Room For You. A rasping vocal told the story of the 1979 closure of a short-lived, punk rock venue at a disused motel on the edge of the provincial city. Depending on your mind-set, the lyrics were either a howl of rage at the injustice, a wail at the loss, or a love-song to an era.

More than three decades later, the author – and Demob’s bass player in 1981 – set out to follow the song across a country that no longer exists. On the road he heard the life stories of the heroes of Yugoslavian punk and the punks themselves; from the Tito era, through the disintegration and wars, forced displacements and permanent exiles, to today’s turbulent ‘reconstruction. Who were ’Tito’s punks’ and who are they now?

An unvarnished but also affectionate portrait of Yugoslavia in the years before its demise through to the present, seen through the unlikely lens of punk and punk rockers. Part travelogue, part history the book is both, and neither, of those things. Rather, it is a mural and soundtrack of a journey through a time and place which no longer exists.

The latest addition to the Global Punk series from Intellect.



Trade Review

'It’s a terrific read, equal parts travel memoir, rock’n’roll history, and bittersweet recollection of a country fractured and dismantled, seamlessly integrating past and present, politics and culture, and the alternating voices of the author and a variety of fascinating characters he meets on the way. Musicians and businessmen, artists and thugs, Bosnians, Serbs, Croats, and all the rest, thrown together and then torn apart, each with their own story to tell, by turns hilarious, inspiring, and tragic. Engaging, thoughtful, and shot through with a certain melancholy, much too sharp to be dismissed as mere nostalgia, for a time and place seeming lost forever. In Search of Tito’s Punks is one of the more interesting and original rock books to come along in some time.'

-- Simon Harvey, Ugly Things Magazine

'Barry Phillips has written a very important book here. It is important for understanding Yugo Punk, and has clear relevance [...] to the study of punk generally. More than that, by focusing on lived punk lives rather than on the politics, geopolitics, and the imagined primordial ancient hatreds that are held to define the Balkans, Phillips has made a significant contribution to Yugoslav and Balkan studies.

This is an excellent book, an eye-opener both for those interested in the Balkans, and those interested in punk. And beautifully realised in print, paper, and card by the Punk Scholars Network, who clearly take book production as craft very seriously. Very punky. A must-read.'

-- Mike Diboll, Toxic Grafity

Table of Contents

Foreword
Acknowledgements
Notes on Pronunciation

Prologue: The Play-on Track: Teenage Kicks

One: Scheveningen: Paint It Black

Two: The Hague to Gruška 4
ALEKSANDAR DRAGAŠ: Club Limb, Zagreb

Three: Zagreb: Black Lamb and Grey Falcon
ZDENKO FRANJIĆ: Club 22, Prečko, Zagreb

Four: To Ljubljana: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway

Five:
A Day in Court: Vermeer in Bosnia
ANTE ČIKARA: The Haven, Scheveningen and De Pijp, Amsterdam

Six: Music Is the Art of Time
PERO LOVŠIN: The Fish Market, Ljubljana

Seven: The Ljubljana Punk Rock Taxi Tour
MARIN ROSIĆ: On the Road in Ljubljana

Eight: Return to Zagreb
MATIJA VUICA AND JURE POPOVIĆ: The Bulldog, Central Zagreb

Nine: Zagreb (1977) ... and Tito’s Coming to Town
DARKO RUNDEK: Caffe Bar Albatros, Ljubljanica 4, Zagreb

Ten: The Hague Hilton

Eleven: Istria: Pirates and Punk Rock Heartlands
RUJANA JEGER: Zagreb

Twelve: Pula: Uljanik Calling
SALE VERUDA: Forum Square, Pula

Thirteen: England: Back to the Forest
ROBERT ‘MIFF’ SMITH: Coleford, Gloucestershire, England

Fourteen: To Belgrade: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway Again

Fifteen: Internacionalnih Brigada
PETAR JANJATOVIĆ: Radost Fina Kuhinjica, Belgrade

Sixteen: Lost in Belgrade Central
BRANKO ROSIĆ: Belgrade café terrace

Seventeen: Kafana Mornar: Belgrade Is Drowning
POGONBGD, TRNJE AND FRIENDS: Kafana Mornar and Studio Mašina 23

Eighteen: Novi Sad, Vojvodina: Words and Bullets

Nineteen: Novi Sad: NATO Bombs and Jew Street Ghosts
STEVAN GOJKOV, VLADIMIR ‘RADULE’ RADUSINOVIĆ AND SAVA SAVIĆ: Central Novi Sad

Twenty: To Kragujevac: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway Once More
VUJA (SAŠA VUJIĆ): Kragujevac

Twenty One: Return to Belgrade: The House of Flowers

Sleeve Notes: Standing at the Gates of the West: Hitsville Yugo

Timeline: Yugoslavian Punk from 1975 Until Break-Up
(VINKO BARIĆ)

Selected Discography
Index

In Search of Tito’s Punks: On the Road in a

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    A Hardback by Barry Phillips

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      View other formats and editions of In Search of Tito’s Punks: On the Road in a by Barry Phillips

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 16/06/2023
      ISBN13: 9781789387315, 978-1789387315
      ISBN10: 1789387310

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The book traces the story of how a song recorded in 1981 by a young punk rock band from a cultural backwater on the English-Welsh border, and released on a tiny independent record label, became famous in a Yugoslavia formed in the image of Marshall Tito? Why was it 30 years before the members of the band found out? How did this ‘socialist’ country have one of the most vibrant punk scenes in the world?

      Gloucester, England, 1981; multi-racial, teenage street-punk band, Demob, recorded and released what would become their best known and most enduring song, No Room For You. A rasping vocal told the story of the 1979 closure of a short-lived, punk rock venue at a disused motel on the edge of the provincial city. Depending on your mind-set, the lyrics were either a howl of rage at the injustice, a wail at the loss, or a love-song to an era.

      More than three decades later, the author – and Demob’s bass player in 1981 – set out to follow the song across a country that no longer exists. On the road he heard the life stories of the heroes of Yugoslavian punk and the punks themselves; from the Tito era, through the disintegration and wars, forced displacements and permanent exiles, to today’s turbulent ‘reconstruction. Who were ’Tito’s punks’ and who are they now?

      An unvarnished but also affectionate portrait of Yugoslavia in the years before its demise through to the present, seen through the unlikely lens of punk and punk rockers. Part travelogue, part history the book is both, and neither, of those things. Rather, it is a mural and soundtrack of a journey through a time and place which no longer exists.

      The latest addition to the Global Punk series from Intellect.



      Trade Review

      'It’s a terrific read, equal parts travel memoir, rock’n’roll history, and bittersweet recollection of a country fractured and dismantled, seamlessly integrating past and present, politics and culture, and the alternating voices of the author and a variety of fascinating characters he meets on the way. Musicians and businessmen, artists and thugs, Bosnians, Serbs, Croats, and all the rest, thrown together and then torn apart, each with their own story to tell, by turns hilarious, inspiring, and tragic. Engaging, thoughtful, and shot through with a certain melancholy, much too sharp to be dismissed as mere nostalgia, for a time and place seeming lost forever. In Search of Tito’s Punks is one of the more interesting and original rock books to come along in some time.'

      -- Simon Harvey, Ugly Things Magazine

      'Barry Phillips has written a very important book here. It is important for understanding Yugo Punk, and has clear relevance [...] to the study of punk generally. More than that, by focusing on lived punk lives rather than on the politics, geopolitics, and the imagined primordial ancient hatreds that are held to define the Balkans, Phillips has made a significant contribution to Yugoslav and Balkan studies.

      This is an excellent book, an eye-opener both for those interested in the Balkans, and those interested in punk. And beautifully realised in print, paper, and card by the Punk Scholars Network, who clearly take book production as craft very seriously. Very punky. A must-read.'

      -- Mike Diboll, Toxic Grafity

      Table of Contents

      Foreword
      Acknowledgements
      Notes on Pronunciation

      Prologue: The Play-on Track: Teenage Kicks

      One: Scheveningen: Paint It Black

      Two: The Hague to Gruška 4
      ALEKSANDAR DRAGAŠ: Club Limb, Zagreb

      Three: Zagreb: Black Lamb and Grey Falcon
      ZDENKO FRANJIĆ: Club 22, Prečko, Zagreb

      Four: To Ljubljana: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway

      Five:
      A Day in Court: Vermeer in Bosnia
      ANTE ČIKARA: The Haven, Scheveningen and De Pijp, Amsterdam

      Six: Music Is the Art of Time
      PERO LOVŠIN: The Fish Market, Ljubljana

      Seven: The Ljubljana Punk Rock Taxi Tour
      MARIN ROSIĆ: On the Road in Ljubljana

      Eight: Return to Zagreb
      MATIJA VUICA AND JURE POPOVIĆ: The Bulldog, Central Zagreb

      Nine: Zagreb (1977) ... and Tito’s Coming to Town
      DARKO RUNDEK: Caffe Bar Albatros, Ljubljanica 4, Zagreb

      Ten: The Hague Hilton

      Eleven: Istria: Pirates and Punk Rock Heartlands
      RUJANA JEGER: Zagreb

      Twelve: Pula: Uljanik Calling
      SALE VERUDA: Forum Square, Pula

      Thirteen: England: Back to the Forest
      ROBERT ‘MIFF’ SMITH: Coleford, Gloucestershire, England

      Fourteen: To Belgrade: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway Again

      Fifteen: Internacionalnih Brigada
      PETAR JANJATOVIĆ: Radost Fina Kuhinjica, Belgrade

      Sixteen: Lost in Belgrade Central
      BRANKO ROSIĆ: Belgrade café terrace

      Seventeen: Kafana Mornar: Belgrade Is Drowning
      POGONBGD, TRNJE AND FRIENDS: Kafana Mornar and Studio Mašina 23

      Eighteen: Novi Sad, Vojvodina: Words and Bullets

      Nineteen: Novi Sad: NATO Bombs and Jew Street Ghosts
      STEVAN GOJKOV, VLADIMIR ‘RADULE’ RADUSINOVIĆ AND SAVA SAVIĆ: Central Novi Sad

      Twenty: To Kragujevac: On the Brotherhood and Unity Highway Once More
      VUJA (SAŠA VUJIĆ): Kragujevac

      Twenty One: Return to Belgrade: The House of Flowers

      Sleeve Notes: Standing at the Gates of the West: Hitsville Yugo

      Timeline: Yugoslavian Punk from 1975 Until Break-Up
      (VINKO BARIĆ)

      Selected Discography
      Index

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