Neočekivana Sila Koja Se Iznenada Pojavljuje i Rešava Stvar | |
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Also known as | Neočekivana Sila, Sila |
Origin | Belgrade, Serbia |
Genres | Electronica, alternative rock, experimental rock, neo-psychedelia, breakbeat, trip hop, drum and bass |
Years active | 1997 – present |
Labels | B92 |
Associated acts | Džambasovi, Jarboli, Jazzwah, Kanda, Kodža i Nebojša, TV Moroni, Veliki Prezir |
Website | Official Myspace |
Members | Boris Mladenović Nemanja Aćimović Vladimir Đorđević |
Past members | Goran Nikolić Zlatko Veljović Srđan Jerotijević Oliver Nektarijević |
Neočekivana Sila Koja Se Iznenada Pojavljuje i Rešava Stvar (Serbian Cyrillic: Неочекивана Сила Која Се Изненада Појављује и Решава Ствар; trans. An Unexpected Force Which Suddenly Appears and Resolves the Matter) is a Serbian alternative rock/experimental music supergroup from Belgrade.
The supergroup was formed on December 1997 by the musicians active in notable Belgrade alternative rock bands, guitarists Vladimir Đorđević (a former Klajberi and Jazzwah member) and Goran Nikolić "Orge" (a former TV Moroni, Džambasovi and Nosorog member), drummer Nemanja Aćimović (Jarboli member), bassist Zlatko Veljović "Laki" (a former Džambasovi and Gori Škola member) and vocalist Oliver Nektarijević (Kanda, Kodža i Nebojša member). The band got the name by a definition for the term Deus ex machina, found in Milan Vujaklija's dictionary of foreign terms.
Having numerous club performances, the band had quickly drawn attention of the public to themselves. This was achieved with the fact that their every live appearance was different, due to improvisations and the musical style, featuring a combination of diverse musical influences, including breakbeat, trip hop, dub, rock and dance music. The selected recordings from their performances were remixed in the studio by Boris Mladenović, Vladimir Đorđević, Nenad Branković and Goran Vukojčić, and released independently by the band themselves on compact disc and cassette during the autumn of 1999. The self-titled album was entirely written by the band themselves, and the song "The Spirit of God" featured sampled recordings of the Baby Kain song "Feel This".