Baja Mali Knindža

Baja Mali Knindža

Baja on 1999 album cover
Born Mirko Pajčin
(1966-10-13) 13 October 1966
Gubin, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
Occupation Serbian folk singer
Years active 1989–present

Musical career

Genres
Instruments Vocals

Mirko Pajčin (Serbian Cyrillic: Мирко Пајчин; born 13 October 1966), known by his stage name Baja Mali Knindža (Баја Мали Книнџа) which means "Baja Little Knin-Ninja" (referring to the nickname of the Serbian Red Berets), is a Serbian folk singer and songwriter. He is often described as part of the turbo folk scene, and is known for his Serbian nationalistic lyrics. His cousin was the pop-folk recording artist Ksenija Pajčin.

Baja Mali Knindža is not to be mistaken with Nedeljko Bajić Baja, who is another Serb folk singer.

Early life

Born as Mirko Pajčin[1] into a Bosnian Serb family in the village of Gubin, near Livno, Bosnia and Herzegovina. His cousin Ksenija Pajčin, pop-folk recording artist, was murdered by her ex-boyfriend 16 March 2010.[2][3] Later that same year Knindža released the song "Spavaj, kraljice" (Sleep, Queen) in her memory.[4] He said that he was very "shaken" by her death.

Controversy and career

Baja won a 1989 competition for amateur singers in Livno and released his first album in 1991. His career began just as Yugoslavia was breaking up. Throughout the 1990s, he was known for his strong Serbian nationalism and nationalist songs supporting the Serbs during the Yugoslav wars.[5][6] His first professional success was the song "Bpaти се Војводо" (Come Back, Voivode), in which he appealed to Serbian World War II Chetnik commander Momčilo Đujić to come back to the areas of the Croatian Krajina and help lift the spirits of the suffering Croatian Serbs. He said that he would never consider going to Croatia because he claimed that some Croatian soldiers burned down his house and desecrated his ancestors' graves.

Baja performs at "Кочићев збор" (Kočić's Assembly) in Zmijanje near Banja Luka in mid-August every year, and he usually attracts tens of thousands of people. Since the fall of Krajina, Knindža has written many songs about his dream of the Serb people returning to live in territories now inhabited by Croats following the Croatian War for Independence.

Baja Mali Knindža is controversial due to his Serbian nationalism.[7] Most of his songs are condemned in non-Serb parts of Bosnia and Croatia because of their xenophobic lyrics, which often reference war leaders during the Yugoslav wars. For example, his song "Ne volim te Alija" describes his strong dislike for the Bosnian wartime president Alija Izetbegović and includes the lyrics:

Не волим те, Алија, / I don't like you, Alija
Зато што си балија / Because you are a Balija (a derogatory term for Bosniaks)
Срушио си миран сан / You destroyed a peaceful dream
Носила ти Дрина сто муџахедина / May the river Drina take hundreds of your mujahideen
Сваки дан / Every day [8]

In one song titled "Ćuti, Ćuti Ujko!" (the song and music video feature Serbian rock star Bora Đorđević), he sings "Shut up, shut up, ujko" (an informal term for Ustaše), "I will kill you" as well as "Shut up, shut up, mujo (Muslim), I will kill you". He has also sung "I don't like people who like the HDZ", which included the lyrics "Fuck their šahovnica".

Despite many of his songs having a nationalistic lyrical theme, he is also known for his often humorous non-political songs such as "Umri Baba" and "Poker Aparat".

He has also sung anti-communist songs such as "Bila Jednom Jedna Zemlja" and the song "Komunjare", which says:

Комуњаре, комуњаре / Commies, commies
ви волите само паре / All that you love is money
сви сте ви комунисти / All of you are communists
прављени на калуп исти / Cast in the same mould [9]

International popularity

Baja Mali Knindža is very popular among the Serbian diaspora in countries such as Switzerland, Australia, Germany, Canada and so on. He has performed abroad numerous times including in Switzerland in 2007 and in Germany in 1993. He has also played in former Yugoslav countries such as Slovenia. He is banned in Croatia and part of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Federation Bosnia and Herzegovina). He is very popular in Republic of Srpska, the other part Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Personal life

Knindža lives with his wife, three daughters and a son in New Belgrade, and drives an older Mitsubishi Pajero. Besides his native language, he also speaks English and Russian. His mother and father live in a newly built house in Surčin.

Baja is a supporter of the Serbian Radical Party, and has sung at the party's conventions. He also released an album, Српским радикалима (Serbian Radicals, 1998), which glorifies the SRS and its leader Vojislav Šešelj.

Discography

Solo

  • Ne dam Krajine (1991)
  • Stan'te paše i Ustaše (1992)
  • Živjeće ovaj narod (1993)
  • Sve za srpstvo, srpstvo nizašta (1993)
  • Uživo sa braćom Bajić, Rašom Pavlovićem, i Goricom Ilić (1993)
  • Još se ništa ne zna (1994)
  • Rat i mir (1994)
  • Kockar bez sreće (1994)
  • Pobijediće istina (1994)
  • Igraju se delije (1995)
  • Idemo dalje (1995)
  • Zbogom oružje (1996)
  • Ne dirajte njega (1997)
  • Povratak u budućnost (1998)
  • Srpskim radikalima (1998)
  • Biti il ne biti (1991)
  • Život je tamo (1999)
  • Zaljubljen i mlad (2000)
  • Đe si legendo (2001)
  • Zbogom pameti (2002)
  • Baja Mali Knindža: uživo (2003)
  • Luda Žurka - uživo (2003)
  • Za kim zvona zvone (2006)
  • Gluvi barut (2007)
  • Idemo malena (2011)
  • Lesi se vraća kući (2012)
  • Govor duše (2014)

With Braća sa Dinare band

  • Goki i Baja bend (1994)
  • Bila jednom jedna zemlja (1995)
  • Plači voljena zemljo (1996)
  • Ja se svoga, ne odričem groba (1997)
  • Idemo do kraja (1998)

References

  1. "Istinski identitet poznatih ličnosti rijetko poznat javnosti". Nezavisne. 20 July 2011. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  2. "Plačem za sestrom Ksenijom". Kurir. 27 December 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  3. "Baja Mali Knindža posvetio pesmu Kseniji Pajčin". Svet. 27 December 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  4. "Baja Mali Knindža posvetio pesmu svojoj pokojnoj sestri Kseniji Pajčin". Press. 16 March 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  5. "Dvostruka mjerila: 'Mali Knindža' slavi četnike u Švicarskoj". Slobodna Dalmacija. 7 October 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  6. "Thompsona protjerali, a Malom Knindži daju da propagira četnike". Jutarnji. 7 October 2009. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  7. Radano, Ronald Michael; Bohlman, Philip Vilas (2000). Music and the racial imagination. University of Chicago Press. p. 639. ISBN 978-0-226-70200-1. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
  8. "Ne Volim Te Alija video with English subtitles".
  9. "Komunjare video with English subtitles".

External links

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