DJ Krmak

Goran Žižak (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Горан Жижак; born 30 August 1968), better known as DJ Krmak (Di-džej Krmak / Ди-џеј Крмак), is a Bosnian turbo-folk singer. He is born in Banja Luka, in the area of the former Yugoslavia, where he grew up. He began making music at the age of 12 years, when he started performing at the nearby motels. Upon completing his military service, he came back to music.[1] His songs are mostly related to current life topics.[2] He graduated from three colleges: law, philosophy and theology

DJ Krmak
Birth nameGoran Žižak
Born (1968-08-30) 30 August 1968
Banja Luka, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia
GenresTurbo-folk, techno-folk
Occupation(s)Musician
Years active1999–present
LabelsDiskoluks, Lazarevic production, Gold music, JVP Fetrib, VIP production, Vujin records, Gold audio video, BN music

Biography

At the age of four, he took the microphone in his hands, after which he delighted everyone present, and has not dropped it since. When he was only twelve, he received an invitation from a band from his place to perform with them, what he agreed to.

In the band with which he performed, there was a member who was a clergyman who left the church, and whom Goran especially pointed out, given that many learned from him. Maybe he was his inspiration for his third college. He successfully finished primary and secondary school in Banja Luka, after which enrolled in college

Goran stated on several occasions that he wanted to stand out, that everyone sang the same music and in the same way, and that he needed something for which he would be noticed. He knew that everyone would be irritated when they heard such a name (krmak means pig in Serbian), so they would be more interested in the performer and his music.

Discography

  • Коckari (1999)
  • Šumaher (2000)
  • Bo San Remo (2001)
  • Hollywood (2003)
  • Meksikanac (2004)
  • Vanzemljaci (2006)
  • Doktore (2007)
  • Klasična armija (2007)
  • Tu Tu (2008)
  • Bez konkurencije (2010)
  • Doživotna robija (2012)
  • Mehanicar (2019)
  • Karantena (2020)

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.