Turbo folk clubs

P1060090In the beginning of the nineties a new form of music was born in Serbia. A perfect blend of traditional folklore music and modern western techno culture, it combined two good things to create a monstrous mix: turbo folk. Without many or any national trademarks present, some people claim that this genre has what it takes to be considered as the epiphany of all things Serbian. Maybe, but it certainly does not represent all things Serbian that are good.

Anyway, the music (can it be called music?) is not going to be described here, because
1. it is impossible,
2. it would be a waste of space and
3. we want you to see it (and hear it) for yourself.

These are the places where you can find people who still refuse to evolve, businessmen who think it can’t get any classier than this, and girls looking for a new sugar daddy. And if you plan on starting a fight, better have your gun ready.

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Comment by David | 2009-06-06

You act like a Belgrade metropolitan man, but you don't know nothing about the outside world. For one thing, western men and w love serbian music when they sea/hear it. They think it's sexy music. So why then do you bash serbian music on this site. A lot of western tourists would visit Belgrade and go to serbian turbo folk clubs if they knew about it. You clearly don´t appreciate good music.

Comment by NikiBGD | 2009-08-31

@ David -
a) He is not bashing "Serbian music" but turbo-folk music (not to be confused with Serbian traditional folk music either), which is atrocious to anyone who has the slightest sense of hearing and good taste.
b) Learn how to speak ("don't know nothing" = double negative) before you talk about "good music" or any other part of any culture.
P.S. The above post is on the money.
Thank you.

Comment by Drugi David | 2009-12-31

@NikiBGD, he is actually semi-correct - using the English negative, just incorrectly. So yes, there is a negative any/anything: it is called "don't know anything" instead of "don't know something". Compare to "I can see some birds" and "I can't see any birds".