Tomislav Ivčić

Tomislav Ivčić (* 1953 in Zadar, † March 4, 1993 in Zagreb) was a Croatian singer, composer and politician.

Life

Thanks to his many appearances at festivals of popular music of the 1970s, was Tomislav Ivčić one of the most famous Croatian singers and composers of his time. Throughout his career, he had many successes that were inspired not only by the Dalmatian folklore, but also by the processing of famous Italian canzoni. In his successful career as a singer and composer, he wrote more than 200 songs and lyrics, took 23 albums, sold in excess of 2.5 million copies. S usana Otrov tvojih, Kalelagra, Stop The War in Croatia and Večeras per naša fešta are among his best-known songs. During the war in Croatia, he wrote and sang the song Stop The War in Croatia in English. In 1990 he became a member of the Croatian Democratic party and for that party, he won in 1993, a place in the Croatian Parliament. Shortly before the start of his office in Parliament and shortly after his interview for the weekly newspaper Globus he died in a car accident in Zagreb. He was buried at the Zagreb cemetery Mirogoj.

One of his greatest achievements is the song Večeras per naša fešta, which became the anthem of Dalmatia. This song is sung at various festive occasions and sporting achievements. The inhabitants of Zadar particularly like the song Kalelagra, which describes the main street of Zadar and is popular not only in Zadar. His brothers are well -known Croatian singer: Vedran Ivčić, as well as the older half- brother Đani Maršan, an esteemed Croatian singer and composer.

Tomislav Ivčić in Germany

At Lake Constance, on the way between singing and Lindau, there is the baroque pilgrimage church Birnau in which to assemble since 1973 Croats from Germany, Austria and Switzerland. This place became a mass meeting of the Croats. In 1990 Tomislav Ivčić also occurred after the show to at the concert. He sang a song about Birnau and wowed the Croatian audience in Germany.

Discography

  • Singer
  • Songwriter
  • Yugoslav musicians
  • Born in 1953
  • Died in 1993
  • Man
  • Croatian
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