Emina Zečaj (née Ahmedhodžić; 17 March 1929 – 19 April 2020) was a Bosnian interpreter of the traditional folk music, sevdalinka. Zečaj was called an "icon of traditional Bosnian music" by American Billboard magazine in 2004.
Emina Zečaj (née Ahmedhodžić; 17 March 1929 – 19 April 2020) was a Bosnian interpreter of the traditional folk music, sevdalinka.
Zečaj was called an "icon of traditional Bosnian music" by American Billboard magazine in 2004.
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Emina Zečaja lăsat un gând
acum 5 zile
Early life
Emina was born in Sarajevo's Old Town, in what is today Bosnia and Herzegovina on 17 March 1929. She was the daughter of Avdija Ahmedhodžić and his wife Melća.
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Emina Zečaja lăsat un gând
acum 5 zile
Career
Professor Cvjetko Rihtman, an ethnomusicologist, discovered her in the early 1960s. Following persuasion from her friends, Emina auditioned before two well-known professors, Zvonimir Nevžela and Beluš Jungić, with the folk songs Kad se jangin iz sokaka pomoli and Poranila na vodicu Zlata. Ten days later she received a phone call from Ismet Alajbegović Šerbo informing her that she had been accepted into Radio Sarajevo, beating out 30 other contestants.
Zečaj recorded music for the 2003 drama-comedy film Fuse. She also collaborated with Adi Lukovac on the soundtrack for the 2003 war film Remake (Remake - soundtrack). It was Lukovac's final project before dying in a car accident three years later.
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Emina Zečaja lăsat un gând
acum 5 zile
Death
Zečaj was in good health until shortly before her death at age 91. She died on the night of 19 April 2020 in her home. She had attended the funeral of Beba Selimović the previous month at Sarajevo's Bare Cemetery where she was also buried in a Muslim cemetery on 22 April 2020.
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Emina Zečaja lăsat un gând
acum 5 zile
Emina Ahmedhodžić-Zečaj at Discogs
Emina Zečaj discography at Discogs as Emina Zečaj