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La Strada
La Strada
band
1
Šarlo Akrobata
Šarlo Akrobata
band
2
Milan Mladenović
Milan Mladenović
Serbian musician
3
Jarboli
Jarboli
band
4
Partibrejkers
Partibrejkers
Serbian rock band
5
Korni Grupa
Korni Grupa
band
6
YU grupa
YU grupa
Serbian and former Yugoslav rock band
7
Električni Orgazam
Električni Orgazam
Serbian rock band
8
Night Shift
Night Shift
9
Darkwood Dub
Darkwood Dub
Serbian alt rock band
10
Džukele
Džukele
band
11
Laza Ristovski
Laza Ristovski
Serbian musician
12
Griva
Griva
13
Del Arno Band
Del Arno Band
band
14
Kerber
Kerber
Serbian rock band
15
Atheist Rap
Atheist Rap
band
16
Idoli
Idoli
new wave band from Belgrade
17
Pop Mašina
Pop Mašina
band
18
Obojeni Program
Obojeni Program
19
Gordi
Gordi
Yugoslav heavy metal band
20
Pekinška Patka
Pekinška Patka
no one knows them
21
Goribor
Goribor
band
22
Balkan
Balkan
23
Repetitor
Repetitor
band
Intro
Serbian musician
Record Labels

Mitar Subotić "Suba" (Serbian Cyrillic: Митар Суботић Суба; June 23, 1961 – November 2, 1999), also known as Rex Ilusivii (Latin for The King of Illusions), was a Serbian-born musician and composer who was set to become one of Brazil's most prominent producers when he died in November 1999.

Subotić obtained a university degree in his hometown from the University of Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia, before continuing electronic music studies in Belgrade. He was a pioneer of electronic music in former Yugoslavia, since he mixed and produced a number of celebrated albums of Yugoslav new wave acts such as Ekatarina Velika, Haustor, Marina Perazić in the course of the 1980s. In 1986, his fusion of electronic music and Yugoslav folk lullabies, In The Mooncage was awarded the International Fund for Promotion of Culture from UNESCO, which included a three-month scholarship to research Afro-Brazilian rhythms in Brazil. Falling in love with the country and its music, he emigrated to São Paulo in the 1990s, where his fruitful production began and ended. During that time he participated Milan Mladenović's last project Angel's Breath, and recorded his famous album São Paulo Confessions.

On November 2, 1999, he was working on the post-production of the album of his new-found diva, Bebel Gilberto, when his studio caught fire. Overcome by smoke, he died trying to rescue the newly recorded material with her. Suba died just a few days after the release of his album São Paulo Confessions, and shortly before the completion of Bebel Gilberto's acclaimed Tanto Tempo, the biggest selling Brazilian album outside Brazil.