Pop The
pop music of Croatia generally resembles the
canzone music of Italy, while including elements of the native traditional music. Croatian record companies produce much material each year, if only to populate the numerous
music festivals. Of special note is the
Split Festival which usually produces the most popular
summer hits. Seasoned pop singers in Croatia include:
Meri Cetinić,
Mišo Kovač,
Ivo Robić,
Vice Vukov,
Krunoslav Slabinac,
Zlatko Pejaković,
Arsen Dedić,
Vinko Coce,
Zdenka Vučković,
Darko Domjan,
Tereza Kesovija,
Gabi Novak,
Ivica Šerfezi,
Oliver Dragojević,
Tomislav Ivčić,
Doris Dragović,
Radojka Šverko,
Maja Blagdan,
Jacques Houdek and many others. Also, the groups
Magazin,
Novi fosili and Grupa 777 have had sustained careers. In more recent times, younger performers such as
Nina Badrić,
Severina,
Gibonni,
Toni Cetinski,
Jelena Rozga,
Danijela,
Lidija Bačić,
Antonija Šola,
Lana Jurčević and many others have captured the attention of the pop audience. Each of them have successfully blended various influences into their distinct music style. For example, Thompson's songs include traditional epic themes from the
Dinaric regions; Severina threads between Croatian pop and a folk sound. Croatian pop music is fairly often listened to in
Slovenia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Serbia,
Montenegro and
North Macedonia due to the union of Yugoslavia that existed until the 1990s. Conversely, Bosnian singers like
Dino Merlin and Serbian
Đorđe Balašević have an audience in Croatia, as well as some others. More recently the
Turbo folk – frowned upon by the establishment some music critics and social commentators – has been popular amongst some sections of Croatian youth. A general resentment to Turbo folk remains as it is not broadcast on state radio and TV. Where on private outlets it may be transmitted, it normally triggers a strong negative reaction from those not liking it. Croatian singers that are using elements of Turbo folk are
Severina and
Jelena Rozga. Croatia is a regular contestant on the
Eurovision Song Contest. Back in Yugoslavia, Croatian pop group
Riva won the contest in
1989. Since independence, Croatia's best finish was in
2024 with the song "
Rim Tim Tagi Dim" by
Baby Lasagna, finishing second and the song later going on to chart across Europe. Some of the other Croatians who performed on the ESC include
Danijel Popović,
Put,
Boris Novković and
Claudia Beni.
Rock The most popular rock bands active during the former Yugoslavia included
Haustor,
Psihomodo Pop,
Azra,
Prljavo Kazalište and
Parni Valjak. There are several rather popular and long-lasting mainstream rock acts like
Parni Valjak,
Prljavo Kazalište,
Crvena Jabuka,
Atomsko Sklonište,
Aerodrom, Tutti Frutti Band, Daleka Obala, Đavoli, Stijene, More, Osmi putnik, Metak, etc. They originated in the 1970s and 1980s, and for the better part of their career resorted to a more mellow, mainstream pop-rock sound. Of some note is also the
Sarajevo school of pop rock which influenced many of these bands, and which also included singers like
Željko Bebek who later worked in Croatia. However,
Croatian new wave (
Novi val) movement, which exploded in 1979/80 and lasted throughout the 1980s, is considered by many to be the high-water mark of Croatian rock music, both in terms of quality and commercial success. The most influential and popular bands of
Novi val were
Azra,
Haustor,
Film, even early
Prljavo Kazalište. Other notable acts were
Animatori,
Buldožer,
Paraf,
Patrola etc. In the late 1980s, the region of
Istria became home to a kind of called
Ča-val, which often used the
Čakavian dialect and elements of traditional music from the regions of Istria and
Kvarner. The new wave scene has collapsed by the end of the eighties, to be replaced by the newcomers like; Tutti Frutti band,
Daleka Obala,
Majke and
Laufer. While Daleka Obala sported a pop-rock sound influenced by Novi val, Croatian pop and even Dalmatian folk, Majke were a back-to-basics, garage-rock act stylistically influenced by bands like the
Black Crowes,
Led Zeppelin or
Black Sabbath, as well as their Serbian counterparts
Partibrejkers. Laufer, led by
Damir Urban (who later went on to form
Urban & 4), were an early nineties alternative rock band taking their cue from the grunge movement.
Let 3 and
KUD Idijoti are also prominent rock acts, popular both for their music and their interesting, often controversial, performances and stunts. Beginning in the late 1980s, folk-rock groups also sprouted across Croatia. The first is said to be
Vještice, who combined
Međimurje folk music with rock and set the stage for artists like
Legen,
Lidija Bajuk and
Dunja Knebl. At the same time on the other side of Croatia, in Istria, a band called
Gustafi started playing their own strange amalgamate of rock and Istrian folk, but it took them more than a decade to reach the nationwide audience. The Split
metal band
Osmi Putnik has also been a success in Croatia and still are today and are also popular in other ex-Yugoslav republics The Sisak
surf rock band
The Bambi Molesters has in the past years gained sizeable international fame and are often touted as one of the best surf-rock acts in the world today. Alternative rock/metal band
Father have had success with their first album
inspirita in countries like the
UK, and have toured with bands like
Korn,
Anthrax and
Apocalyptica. There is also a number of Croatian bands who play modern music in English, most prominent being
My Buddy Moose,
The orange strips,
In-the-go,
Kimiko,
Cold Snap and Snovi
Dance Dance music in Croatia was an offspring of the local pop music and more Western influences. It developed during the late 1980s and early 1990s, picking up on the trends such as
euro disco and
eurodance. It also spawned a wave of
electronic music artists, mostly
house,
techno and
trance.
Dino Dvornik is one of the pioneers of
electronic music in Croatian. The singer
Vanna rose to prominence through the dance trio
E.T., and the music of
Vesna Pisarović has a fair bit of dance beat. Although E.T. still operates, they've changed singers several times and lost in popularity. The band
Colonia is perhaps the only one that rode the dance wave of the '90s and today is one of the most popular performers in Croatia.
Rap The 1990s were marked by the emergence of Croatian
rap music. The Ugly Leaders released the first ever Croatian Hip-Hop album, and gained a strong following in and around Rijeka. In 1991, the Croatian Liberation Front released two widely popular protest singles. The first rap band to gain widespread and lasting acclaim was
The Beat Fleet (TBF) from
Split, whose members took inspiration from harsh economic and social conditions of war-torn
Dalmatia, not that different from American inner cities. Their act was followed by a multitude of artists and groups in
Zagreb, taking inspiration from American
gangsta rap. The Zagreb rappers
Bolesna Braća (also called
Sick Rhyme Sayazz) and
Tram 11 became particularly popular, and to an extent also the duo
Nered &
Stoka. The Croatian rap gained much from the fact
Edo Maajka, a
Bosnian rapper, signed on to a label in Zagreb. Recently a rapper known as
Shorty gained much popularity by having songs with a strong regional flavour of his native
Vinkovci. The Zagreb band
Elemental also entered the scene featuring one of the few Croatian female rappers.
Other The tendency to combine different elements also has a long presence in more
classical music: the opera
Ero s onoga svijeta, written by
Jakov Gotovac in the 1930s, blended the traditional music of the
Dinaric peoples into a scholarly form and achieved great success. ==Classical==