Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Global Rank

Current

Top Releases

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A Secret Gate

507.8K streams

507,753

Kings of Sevdah (Live)

477.8K streams

477,833

Mostar Sevdah Reunion and Saban Bajram...

402.7K streams

402,674

Mostar Sevdah Reunion

347.5K streams

347,484

The Mother of Gypsy Soul

340.4K streams

340,364

Frozen Roses

205.8K streams

205,774

Tales from a Forgotten City

134.2K streams

134,162

Sreta "The Balkan Autumn"

115.9K streams

115,858

Cafe Sevdah

101.9K streams

101,936

The Legends of Life

82.6K streams

82,562

Biography

Mostar Sevdah Reunion is an exquisite group of artists sharing the same passion. Some might say that they live for Sevdah and that could be the only cause of their existence. To decode and to represent this over 400 year old traditional music from Bosnia and Herzegovina is a difficult task to cope with. Despite all obstacles, MSR kept going. The story begins in 1993 when Dragi Sestic, producer and former of the band, recorded an audiocassette with a couple of tracks that was distributed in limited edition among their friends. Those were the times of war in the Balkans and the reason for recording was just a getaway episode to forget for one single moment all the atrocities and suffering. Then, they gave the promise that “the whole world will know about Sevdah” – one day when war would come to an end. When the war was over Dragi Sestic made the first demo recordings of the newly formed band 1998 in Mostar. They fulfilled the promise and recorded their first album Mostar Sevdah Reunion in 1999. Since that day they have been fascinating their audiences wherever they go. The style of the band has changed since its early days, along with many of its members. Guitar and piano have joined violin and accordion as lead instruments, while a younger generation of singers has taken over as vocalists, but the music remains fluid, thoughtful, and an effective reminder that there is more to Balkan music than the high-octane brass bands and drunken stomping of popular imagination.