Although the band's guitarist
Momčilo Bajagić had already been set to venture out on his own, he still contributed significantly to
Večeras vas zabavljaju muzičari koji piju by authoring two and co-writing another two songs. Furthermore, drummer who worked with Bajagić on his side project,
Pozitivna geografija, was brought in to temporarily replace
Vicko Milatović who had been away serving his mandatory
Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) stint.
Večeras vas zabavljaju muzičari koji piju would be the only album recorded with Golubović and the last album before Bajagić and
Rajko Kojić left the band. As Riblja Čorba's record label,
PGP-RTB, declined to facilitate the band's wish of recording the album in
London, the group decided to move to
Jugoton, a high-profile business decision that, in and of itself, received a lot of attention in the Yugoslav press. For their part, Jugoton, while not willing to finance the recording in London either, nevertheless agreed to at least pay for the album to be
mixed in London. Still,
Večeras vas zabavljaju muzičari koji piju would end up being the only album the band released through Jugoton as, within a year, they returned to PGP-RTB for their next studio release. In his autobiography
Uživo!: Autobiografija (
Live!: Autobiography) the band's bass guitarist
Miša Aleksić described the atmosphere at the recording sessions: After completing the recording sessions in Ljubljana, the album's producer
Kornelije Kovač and band members (minus guitarist Bajagić) went to London to mix the material. Bajagić decided not travel to London ostensibly due to feeling that he's "not needed for that part of the process since Kovač has it covered". Instead, while the rest of the band was in London, Bajagić went back home to Belgrade where, in his small Kosovska Street rental apartment using a 4-channel
TASCAM Portastudio cassette recorder he had borrowed from Kovač, he proceeded to record about a third of the material for a potential solo side project he had tentatively been working on. Additionally, he also put together a supporting band and booked a debut show in April 1984 at Belgrade's
Dom Sindikata before also adding a prior warm-up club gig at
Zagreb's
Kulušić. His album, named
Pozitivna geografija and also produced by Kornelije Kovač, would soon be completed and released by PGP-RTB and met with extremely positive critical and commercial notices. ==Track listing==