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Various: Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia 12"

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Various: Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia 12"

Various: Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia 12"

The majority of the bands on the Novi Punk Val album – and this one – were from the Slovenian and Croatian scenes, which means that, as an overview, Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia is a little skewed as it doesn’t feature many of the Serbian groups of the time. Some of those – notably Idoli, Radnička Kontrola and Å arlo Akrobata were among the best Yugoslav punk/new wave bands of all, but to make up for their absence, Bloodstains.. features a handful of tracks by one of the first and most popular Serbian punk bands, Belgrade’s PekinÅ”ka Patka (ā€œPeking Duckā€.) As their name suggests, PekinÅ”ka Patka were not, ideologically speaking, one of the heavier bands of the era, but nevertheless the album opens with a couple of their storming classics. Those two songs are in fact both sides of the band’s second single, ā€œBolje Da Nosim Kratku Kosuā€/ā€Ori Oriā€ from 1980. The A-side is a catchy new wave anthem about the new wave, light-hearted but full of attitude, the gist being that long hair and hard rock is old news and punk is here to stay. It’s an energetic, fun record, not unlike UK bands of the time like The Vapors or The Undertones. ā€œOri Oriā€ is more of the same but even more energetic and anthemic, and the two songs provide an easy way into a well-rounded and satisfying album, even if it’s sometimes mysterious to those of us who don’t understand the lyrics. Slovenia’s Pankrti are a very different prospect, confrontational and political, and their sound is more hard-edged and raw than PekinÅ”ka Patka’s was. Their ā€œLepi in Prazniā€ (ā€œBeautiful and Emptyā€) from 1978 has a blunt, impassioned Clash/Sham 69 kind of sound, but is every bit as catchy as the PekinÅ”ka Patka tracks. Likewise, Paraf were one of the first Croatian punk bands and their jagged 1978 single ā€œMoj Zivot Je Non Valā€ is another catchy song with pleasant echoes of The Ramones’ ā€œToday Your Love, Tomorrow the World.ā€

On the evidence of Bloodstains… The Clash were far more of an influence on Yugoslavian punk than the Sex Pistols and a good proportion of the bands on the compilation clatter and rant through 2-minute bursts of ragged guitars and feral energy. But there’s more to it than just first generation punk; Croatian band Prljavo KazaliÅ”te certainly have enough energy and attitude to fit easily into the punk pigeonhole, but their ā€œMajkaā€ (1978) also has echoes of distinctly un-punk bands like Status Quo in its driving rock groove. Problemi’s ebullient, Buzzcocks-like ā€œGrad Izobiljaā€ was a highlight of Novi Punk Val and it stands out here too, for its ranting rawness and pop hooks. Termiti were another Novi Punk Val band and they stand out too, thanks to a Seeds/Doors-esque organ that makes them come across more as a supercharged ā€˜60s garage band than classic ā€˜70s punk. Occasionally, the sequencing of the album leaves a little to be desired: a trio of very similar – though all good enough – raucous, Clash-like songs by Slovenia’s Kuzle would have been better spread out over the record instead of together and likewise three songs later on by Pankrti, which again are individually all good, but blur into each other when side by side. When you have the variety that this compilation has – where anthems like Lublanski Psi’s incendiary ā€œTV (Ecerna Revolucija)ā€ stand out partly because they appear between very different sounding groups – it feels like a slightly missed opportunity, assuming that anyone actually listens to a compilation album in sequence these days.

An unlikely highlight is PekinÅ”ka Patka’s (very) punked-up version of French smooth-crooner Alain BarriĆØre’s suave 1963 Eurovision cheese-ballad ā€œElle Ć©tait si jolie,ā€ covered as ā€œBila Je Tako Lijepa,ā€ which is great fun, but it wilts somewhat in the face of a pair of authentic punk rock blasts from Paraf and the three even more 1977-sounding (though actually 1980) Pankrti tracks. As if to make up for ā€œBila Je Tako Lijepa,ā€ the album gives PekinÅ”ka Patka another go, ending with two of their most punk/Oi!-sounding songs; ā€œKratkovidi Magaracā€ and the gritty, Clash/Anti-Nowhere League-flavoured rampage ā€œKontracepcija.ā€ In many ways, punk is a genre best explored via compilations and mixtapes and though Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia isn’t perfect, it’s an excellent, exhilarating introduction to one of the most vital punk and new wave scenes of the late ā€˜70s and early’80s. It’s likely to leave newcomers to the delights of Eastern bloc punk wanting more and, luckily, there’s a lot out there to explore.

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Various: Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia 12"—

$18.00

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The majority of the bands on the Novi Punk Val album – and this one – were from the Slovenian and Croatian scenes, which means that, as an overview, Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia is a little skewed as it doesn’t feature many of the Serbian groups of the time. Some of those – notably Idoli, Radnička Kontrola and Å arlo Akrobata were among the best Yugoslav punk/new wave bands of all, but to make up for their absence, Bloodstains.. features a handful of tracks by one of the first and most popular Serbian punk bands, Belgrade’s PekinÅ”ka Patka (ā€œPeking Duckā€.) As their name suggests, PekinÅ”ka Patka were not, ideologically speaking, one of the heavier bands of the era, but nevertheless the album opens with a couple of their storming classics. Those two songs are in fact both sides of the band’s second single, ā€œBolje Da Nosim Kratku Kosuā€/ā€Ori Oriā€ from 1980. The A-side is a catchy new wave anthem about the new wave, light-hearted but full of attitude, the gist being that long hair and hard rock is old news and punk is here to stay. It’s an energetic, fun record, not unlike UK bands of the time like The Vapors or The Undertones. ā€œOri Oriā€ is more of the same but even more energetic and anthemic, and the two songs provide an easy way into a well-rounded and satisfying album, even if it’s sometimes mysterious to those of us who don’t understand the lyrics. Slovenia’s Pankrti are a very different prospect, confrontational and political, and their sound is more hard-edged and raw than PekinÅ”ka Patka’s was. Their ā€œLepi in Prazniā€ (ā€œBeautiful and Emptyā€) from 1978 has a blunt, impassioned Clash/Sham 69 kind of sound, but is every bit as catchy as the PekinÅ”ka Patka tracks. Likewise, Paraf were one of the first Croatian punk bands and their jagged 1978 single ā€œMoj Zivot Je Non Valā€ is another catchy song with pleasant echoes of The Ramones’ ā€œToday Your Love, Tomorrow the World.ā€

On the evidence of Bloodstains… The Clash were far more of an influence on Yugoslavian punk than the Sex Pistols and a good proportion of the bands on the compilation clatter and rant through 2-minute bursts of ragged guitars and feral energy. But there’s more to it than just first generation punk; Croatian band Prljavo KazaliÅ”te certainly have enough energy and attitude to fit easily into the punk pigeonhole, but their ā€œMajkaā€ (1978) also has echoes of distinctly un-punk bands like Status Quo in its driving rock groove. Problemi’s ebullient, Buzzcocks-like ā€œGrad Izobiljaā€ was a highlight of Novi Punk Val and it stands out here too, for its ranting rawness and pop hooks. Termiti were another Novi Punk Val band and they stand out too, thanks to a Seeds/Doors-esque organ that makes them come across more as a supercharged ā€˜60s garage band than classic ā€˜70s punk. Occasionally, the sequencing of the album leaves a little to be desired: a trio of very similar – though all good enough – raucous, Clash-like songs by Slovenia’s Kuzle would have been better spread out over the record instead of together and likewise three songs later on by Pankrti, which again are individually all good, but blur into each other when side by side. When you have the variety that this compilation has – where anthems like Lublanski Psi’s incendiary ā€œTV (Ecerna Revolucija)ā€ stand out partly because they appear between very different sounding groups – it feels like a slightly missed opportunity, assuming that anyone actually listens to a compilation album in sequence these days.

An unlikely highlight is PekinÅ”ka Patka’s (very) punked-up version of French smooth-crooner Alain BarriĆØre’s suave 1963 Eurovision cheese-ballad ā€œElle Ć©tait si jolie,ā€ covered as ā€œBila Je Tako Lijepa,ā€ which is great fun, but it wilts somewhat in the face of a pair of authentic punk rock blasts from Paraf and the three even more 1977-sounding (though actually 1980) Pankrti tracks. As if to make up for ā€œBila Je Tako Lijepa,ā€ the album gives PekinÅ”ka Patka another go, ending with two of their most punk/Oi!-sounding songs; ā€œKratkovidi Magaracā€ and the gritty, Clash/Anti-Nowhere League-flavoured rampage ā€œKontracepcija.ā€ In many ways, punk is a genre best explored via compilations and mixtapes and though Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia isn’t perfect, it’s an excellent, exhilarating introduction to one of the most vital punk and new wave scenes of the late ā€˜70s and early’80s. It’s likely to leave newcomers to the delights of Eastern bloc punk wanting more and, luckily, there’s a lot out there to explore.

Various: Bloodstains Across Yugoslavia 12" | Sorry State Records