Pankrti

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Pankrti
Pankrti.JPG
Pankrti performing live at Nisomnia festival in 2009
Background information
Origin Ljubljana, Slovenia
Genres Punk rock
Years active 1977–1987, 2007-today

Pankrti (The Bastards in Slovene) were a punk rock band from Ljubljana, Slovenia, active in the late 1970s and 1980s. They were known for provocative and political songs. They billed themselves as The First Punk Band Behind The Iron Curtain (one of their songs was titled, Behind iron curtain old brods are pulling the red beet). They are one of the most important former Yugoslav punk groups and one of the first punk rock bands ever formed in a communist country.

Biography

Gregor Tomc and Peter Lovšin, two young men from the Ljubljana suburb of Kodeljevo, came up with the idea of forming a band in 1977. From the start, the band was heavily influenced by the UK punk scene. Tomc and Lovšin were the primary song writers. Lovšin was the lead singer in the band, while Tomc came up with the band name and was the band's manager.

The band started playing in the fall of 1977, practicing in the basement of Kodeljevo's music school, and held their first concert at Moste High School. Initially, they played covers of established punk bands including the Sex Pistols, The Clash and New York Dolls. Some of the first original songs by the band that became popular were: "Za železno zaveso" (Behind The Iron Curtain), "Anarhist" (Anarchist), and "Lublana je bulana" (Ljubljana is Sick). They were included in the Novi Punk Val compilation album. They released their first album "Dolgcajt" (Boredom) in 1980 and gained the status of a cult band all over former Yugoslavia.

Their second album “Državni ljubimci” (State Lovers) was highly appreciated in the public and gained an award for best Yugoslav album of the year.

In 1984, they released their Rdeči album (Red Album). The title is an obvious pun on the famous album by The Beatles and red as a symbol of communism. The album featured a cover version of the famous Italian communist revolutionary song Bandiera Rossa (Red Flag), which is one of their most famous tracks.

One of their last concerts was in Tivoli Hall in Ljubljana in 1987, named Zadnji pogo (The Last Pogo).

In 1996, the group temporarily reunited to perform as a support act for the Sex Pistols concert in Ljubljana during their Filthy Lucre Tour. In 2003, Pankrti were included in the 2003 Yugonostalgic Croatian rockumentary Sretno dijete, which deals with the former Yugoslav Punk and new wave scene of the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Reunion

The band's founding members, Gregor Tomc and Peter Lovšin, who is now a solo artist backed by the band Španski borci (Spanish Republican Fighters), announced Pankrti's reunion concert in the Hall Tivoli for December 1, 2007 as a celebration of their 30th anniversary and it immediately sold out.[1][2] This show was followed by performances in Serbia and Croatia. These events coincided with the 2007 Sex Pistols reunion for the 30th anniversary of Never Mind The Bollocks.[3][4]

Popular references

  • A movie was made about their first album Dolgcajt (Boredom).
  • Another movie called by one of their greatest song "Totalna revolucija" (Total Revolution), that talked about Pankrti, has been seen in cinema, and it talked about appearance of punk- rock in Slovenia (Yug) by Pankrti.
  • In the Croatian-produced movie Sretno dijete (Fortunate Child) they had also a very important role as a starters of a new scene in Yugoslavia.
  • The exhibition of their photos was held at the Modern Culture Museum in Slovenia.
  • The rock band Azra mentions Pankrti in its song "Balkan":
Brijem bradu, brkove, da ličim na Pankrte
Translation: I shave my beard, mustache to resemble Pankrti (regarding Azra's frontman Johnny Štulić's transition from hippie to new wave).
  • In the Slovenian film Outsider, some of the soundtrack is original Pankrti music and most of the characters had the names of their songs.
  • The Slovenian punk band Racija has a song "To ni bla Metka" (That Was Not Metka), apparently parodying Pankrti's song "Metka". This Pankrti song was included in the Yugoslav new wave-related movie Dečko koji obećava in the scene in the student campus restaurant.
  • The legendary BBC Radio DJ John Peel introduced them to a wider audience in Great Britain.
  • NME wrote a few articles about them.

Members

Discography

  • Lublana je bulana (1978, SKUC)
  • Dolgcajt (1980, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Novi Punk Val (1981)
  • Namesto tebe (1981, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Državni ljubimci (1982, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Svoboda (1982, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Rdeči album (1984, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Pesmi sprave (1985, ZKP RTLJ)
  • Slovan (1985, Slovan)
  • Sexpok (1987, ZKP RTVLJ)

See also

References

  1. [1][2]
  2. [3]
  3. Sex Pistols to make live comeback
  4. The great Sex Pistols pantomime

External links

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