For me it was an out-of-body experience, an un-earthy feeling… something that shook me to that extent that I felt physical changes inside." Slobodan was threading deeper into the faith and realized that in great part Serbian traditional singing and traditional songs were immensely based on Byzantine chants. “One day, I went to the Kovilj Monastery and experienced a great temblor inside my soul the moment I heard monks chanting. The feedback that he got from religion was reciprocal, because he entered faith through music. Slobodan claims to have recognized the true gist of music upon entering his religion, when suddenly he experienced a revelation of different and unknown musical views and fields.
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In 2004 he graduated, and three years later he received his Master’s Degree of Arts with honors and an award for his MA concert. Trkulja continued with his studies in February 2000.
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In 1999, right before the NATO bombing of Serbia, he returned to his homeland and postponed his education until the end of the war. In 1998 Slobodan went to Amsterdam, where he studied at Conservatorium van Amsterdam, Saxophone Department, an instrument which he had played less than a year and a half at that point. He spent the next four years focusing on his high school education and performing with Kolo. In less than a year he was announced the best instrumentalist at the "Festival of Music Societies of Vojvodina".
#SLOBODAN TRKULJA FB PROFESSIONAL#
At the age of 14, he started playing in the professional folk ensemble Kolo in Belgrade. After clarinet, Slobodan learned to play dozen more instruments in the next eight years. At the age of 10 he taught himself to play the clarinet. Trkulja was born in Odžaci on May 29, 1977. Slobodan trkulja balkanopolis with belgrade philharmonics.Zvira voda josipa lisac ft slobodan trkulja masterpeace in concert.Slobodan moved to Netherlands in 1997, and returned to Serbia in 2008, where he has been since. Aside from playing 13 instruments, Dutch daily NRC Handelsblad called him "one of the most beautiful male voices of the Balkan." He had no formal music training until 1997, but attended a public high school in Sremski Karlovci. He is the founder of the Modern Balkan Tradition music genre, although he is most famous for his collaboration with Metropole Orchestra from Netherlands in 2008. Trkulja is one of the first artists who composed, performed, and popularized Balkan Traditional Music with a modern approach in arrangements. Venezuelan voters chose this Sunday who will occupy 3,082 positions in total, distributed in 23 governors, 335 mayors, 253 legislators to the Legislative Councils and 2,471 councilors.Slobodan Trkulja (born May 29, 1977) is a Serbian multi-instrumentalist, composer and singer in traditional and Byzantium style. “Let’s hope that the political actors who participated in this farce have understood once and for all that tyrannies are not fought with elections,” he said. and some European countries.įor the president of Veppex, José Antonio Colina, the participation of the opposition was a clear mistake. The Electoral Observation Mission of the European Union (EOM-EU) monitored the elections, which were the first since 2017 in which there were candidates from the bulk of the opposition, including that represented by Juan Guaidó, recognized as interim president by the United States. The results show a clear victory for the pro-government candidates over the opponents.
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The abstention, which according to the Miami-based organization is around 75%, “confirms that Venezuelan society does not trust electoral processes with the presence of Nicolás Maduro in power and categorically delegitimizes all those who participated in the process,” he adds. Veppex, who considered the regional and local elections held this Sunday in Venezuela as “illegitimate” and had asked the international community to ignore their results, highlighted in a statement the low participation that there was. “We hope that the international community joins the voices that have ignored this electoral process and we demand that the Commission of Observers of the European Union tell the reality of what is observed and not serve as an instrument to legitimize a narco tyranny,” he stressed Veppex in a statement. The Organization of Venezuelans Persecuted Politicians in Exile (Veppex) asked the EU on Monday not to serve as “an instrument to legitimize a narco tyranny” and hoped that the Venezuelan opposition understands “once and for all” that there is no fight to a dictatorship with elections.