Davorin Popović

Davorin Popović
Born (1946-09-23)23 September 1946
Sarajevo, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia
Died 18 June 2001(2001-06-18) (aged 54)
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Genres Rock, progressive rock, rock and roll, pop
Occupation(s) singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1962-2001
Associated acts Indexi
Website http://www.davorin.ba/muzika/default.asp

Davorin Popović (23 September 1946 18 June 2001) was a Bosnian musician, well known throughout the former Yugoslavia. He was the lead singer and frontman of the progressive and pop rock band Indexi throughout most of their career. He and his band "Indexi" became founders of specific music style in former Yugoslavia known as "Sarajevo pop-rock school" who later influenced other bands and singers in Sarajevo and other parts of Yugoslavia. Personally, he was popularly associated with the 1960s bohemian lifestyle of Sarajevo. In his youth, he was a successful basketball player. During his career, he earned nicknames like "Pimpek", "Davor", "Dačo" or simply "Pjevač" (The Singer) due to his unique voice.

In parallel with the group work, he pursued a solo career between 1975 and 1996, albeit in a non-continuous manner. On most of his solo works one or another line-up of Indexi played as backing studio musicians, so his solo career is closely related with that of the band itself. This was also stressed in the album titles when they are usually credited to "Davorin and Indexi" or similar. During the siege of Sarajevo in 1995, he represented Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Eurovision Song Contest in Dublin with the song "Dvadeset prvi vijek" ("21st Century"), finishing in 19th place of the 23 entries.

Some of the most popular songs commonly associated with Indexi were actually issued as Davorin's solo works, such as "I pad je let" ("The Fall Is Flying Too") or "U tebi se žena rađa" ("You're Becoming a Woman") from his debut LP Svaka je ljubav ista (osim one prave) (Every Love Is the Same (Except The True One)) from 1976, which was oddly the first studio album with entirely new songs that was recorded by Indexi as a group (they used to issue singles and compilations rather than studio albums). It was however released as Davorin's solo effort because the band was working on their progressive masterpiece "Modra Rijeka" ("Dark-Blue River") at that time.

Music on Popović's solo albums is generally closer to mainstream pop rock and easy-listening schlager songs, although some retained the trademark Indexi rock formula.

The Bosnian music award Davorin was named in his honor, (later renamed into Indexi (award) in 2008 ), as well as Sarajevo basketball tournament (named under his nickname "Dačo") .

As a sign of highest appreciation of the city for his artistic work, he was buried in the "Alley of Greats" (prestigious place reserved for exceptional Sarajevo citizens) along with his friend and band-playmate, lead virtuoso-guitarist of "Indexi" Slobodan-Bodo Kovačević as well as Bosnian legendary basketball player Mirza Delibašić. All three of them became great legends of the Sarajevo city and Bosnia still during their lifetimes. They were popular and cherished figures as outstanding artists and sportspeople, who helped put Bosnia and Sarajevo on the world map long before the 1984 Winter Olympics (officially known as the XIV Olympic Winter Games Sarajevo 1984) and the bloody war in Bosnia and Herzegovina between 1992 and 1995.

Solo Discography

SP

Albums

Preceded by
Alma & Dejan
with Ostani kraj mene
Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song Contest
1995
Succeeded by
Amila Glamočak
with Za našu ljubav
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