Ljubljana–Zagreb–Beograd
Appearance
Ljubljana-Zagreb-Beograd | ||||
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Live album by | ||||
Released | 7 June 1993 | |||
Recorded | 1982 | |||
Genre | Industrial | |||
Length | 69:38 | |||
Label | Grey Area | |||
Laibach chronology | ||||
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Ljubljana–Zagreb–Beograd, released in 1993, is an album by Slovenian industrial group Laibach, recorded in 1982. It is named after three capitals of three former Yugoslav republics - Ljubljana (Slovenia), Zagreb (Croatia) and Beograd (Belgrade) (Serbia). It is predominantly a live album. The cover features Tomaž Hostnik, who committed suicide in 1982, the bleeding comes from a bottle thrown at him at that night's show.
Track listing
[edit]- "Intro" (live) – :32
- "Unsere Geschichte" (live) (Laibach) – 1:08
- "Rdeči molk (Red Silence)" (live) (Laibach) – 1:46
- "Siemens" (Laibach) – 6:14
- "Smrt za smrt (Death for Death)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:26
- "Država (The State)" (live) (Laibach) – 6:13
- "Zavedali so se — Poparjen je odšel I
(They Have Been Aware — Scalded He Left I)" (live) (Laibach) – 1:52 - "Delo in disciplina (Work and Discipline)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:51
- "Tito-Tito" (live) (a version of Zequinha de Abreu's Tico-Tico no Fubá) – 2:12
- "Ostati zvesti naši preteklošti — Poparjen je odšel II
(To Stay Faithful To Our Past — Scalded He Left II)" (live) (Laibach) – 3:25 - "Tovarna C19 (Factory C19)" (live) (Laibach) – 2:06
- "STT (Machine Factory Trbovlje)" (live) (Laibach) – :31
- "Sveti Urh (Saint Urch)" (live) (Laibach) – 2:01
- "Država (The State)" (Studio Version) (Laibach) – 4:52
- "Cari amici soldati/Jaruzelski/Država/Svoboda
(Dear Soldier Friends/Jaruzelski/The State/Freedom)" (Laibach) – 29:29