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Guča Trumpet Festival

The Guča Trumpet Festival (Serbian: Фестивал трубача у Гучи, romanizedFestival trubača u Guči), also known as the Dragačevski Sabor (Serbian: Драгачевски сабор or Dragačevo Fair (Fete, Gathering or Assembly), pronounced [draɡǎːtʃeʋskiː sǎːbor]), is an annual Balkan brass band festival held in the town of Guča, near the city of Čačak,[1] in the Dragačevo region of western Serbia. Guča is a three-hour bus ride from Belgrade.

Guča Trumpet Festival
The Guča trumpeter statue
Location(s)Guča, Serbia
Years active1961–present
Websitegucafestival.rs

600,000 visitors make their way to the town of 2,000 inhabitants every year, both from Serbia and abroad. Elimination heats are held earlier in the year and only a few dozen bands qualify to compete. Guča's official festival has three parts, Friday's opening concert, Saturday night's celebrations and Sunday's competition. The Friday's concerts are held at the entrance to the official Guča Festival building. This event features previous winners, each band getting to play three tunes while folk dancers, all kitted out in bright knitting patterns, dance kolos and oros in front of a hyped-up audience.

History edit

 
Scene from Boban Marković concert in 2008

Trumpet in Serbia edit

Though today considered a typical traditional instrument in Serbian folk music, trumpet entered folk music in full only at the beginning of the 20th century. Records show that trumpeters were part of the Serbian army of prince Stefan Vojislav, which defeated the Byzantines in the Battle of Bar on the Rumija mountain in 1042. Together with the drummers, they are mentioned being in the armies of prince Lazar Hrebeljanović and his successors, despots Stefan Lazarević and Đurađ Branković in the 14th and 15th century. In all that period, trumpet was only used as a military instrument.[2]

As Serbia was liberated from the Ottomans after the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815, Serbian prince Miloš Obrenović formed the band at his court in Kragujevac. As the new state was still under heavy Ottoman influence, the band played oriental music. It was headed by the very popular violin and zurna player, Mustafa. He was titled oberlautar (chief singer) or in Serbian, bukadžija, which literally means the "noise maker". In order to westernize the state, prince Miloš dismissed Mustafa in 1831 and invited Josif Šlezinger (1794-1870), a musician and composer from Sombor, to form the first military orchestra, with the European instruments, so the trumpet was returned to the orchestras.[2]

The trumpet became popular in the villages of Serbia during the late 19th century. Author Momo Kapor wrote: "In Serbia, who from old times new about gusle, shepherd flutes, flutes and dvojnice, the trumpets were accepted after the Serbo-Turkish wars in the late 19th century, when the company and regimental trumpeters returned to their villages, bringing with them their hit, dented, beaten and often bullet pierced trumpets".[3] After the World War I it became the most popular folk instrument, suppressing the previously dominant gaida and violin (in folk music called ćemane). The amateur players were originally taught by the former professional military trumpeters, like Momir Miletić, Momir Subotić and Dojčilo Đukić. The village orchestras were mostly disbanded during the World War II, but after 1945 they were renewed.[2][4] In time, three schools of brass music developed: eastern (Zaječar, Boljevac), southern (Vranje, Surdulica, Vladičin Han) and western (Užice, Čačak, Požega).

Festival edit

The idea for the festival came from the reporter of Politika, Blagoje Radivojević (1925-2016). He was correspondent from Čačak where in 1961 he noticed a band of trumpeters, playing the farewell to the brigade of the Youth work actions at Čačak's railway station. He suggested to the local administration in the Lučani municipality (to which the region of Dragačevo and the town of Guča administratively belong), to add the trumpeters, as the "special musical heritage of this part of Serbia", to the already existing festival "Dragačevo through sing and dance". The suggestion evolved into the separate trumpet festival.[5] Radivojević, with the help of author Branko V. Radičević [sr], unsuccessfully urged many individuals and organizations in order to gain the support for the project, until they made contact with one of highest authorities in Serbia at the time, a politician and former intelligence officer Slobodan Penezić Krcun. He allowed it, but warned them: "all right, but I don't want to hear about any Serbian nationalism there" (dobro, ali nemoj da čujem da je bilo nekakvog srbovanja).[6]

The inaugural festival was held on 16 October 1961 in the churchyard of the Church of St.Michael and St. Gabriel in Guča, with 4 orchestras from the neighboring villages competing. The winner was Desimir Perišić (1919–83), who is, as of 2017, still the only local musician who won the competition. He was nicknamed "Dragačevo's Harry James". On 10 August 2010 a monument to Perišić was dedicated on the new roundabout at the entrance into Guča from Lučani direction. Author of the entire project was Olivera Jolović, while the 3 m (9.8 ft) tall statue is work of Velimir Karavelić.[2][7] At the first festival, each band had to play five songs. Two obligatory were Sa Ovčara i Kablara and Bledi mesec zagrlio zvezdu danicu, plus two kolos and a march by choice.[8]

 
Guča Trumpet Festival visitors in 2014

The festival gained a wider popularity since 1970, when it became more present in the media. That year, it was described as a "different, colorful, village Serbia, open for all well-meaning people, no matter where they come from". Today, apart from the regular brass orchestras, the competition also includes the children and youth orchestras. By 2017, it grew into the largest trumpet festival, third ethno-festival and one of the 15 largest festivals in the world. In Serbia, it gained a reputation of an unofficial state celebration.[9]

Initially, it was a very modest Assembly - almost subversive for the prevailing political circumstances of the time. However, the Assembly gradually grew and expanded its magical influence, and over the past ten or so years has become the folk remained its key symbol and raison d'etre. It is no longer held solely for the trumpet players. It has grown into a gathering of toastmasters, painters. The song Sa Ovčara i Kablara marks the beginning of the festival each year. Some church music festivals notwithstanding, the Assembly of Trumpet Players is the best known event of this kind extending uninterruptedly for 43 years and attracting guests and musicians alike from every continent. Trumpet players and Folk Song and Dance groups from around the world feel it a great honor to be invited to the Assembly, and the number of visitors increases with each coming year.

The village of Guča has gained world fame owing to its Assembly of Trumpet Players, the largest trumpet event on the planet. The traditional Dragačevo Trumpet - its cult kept alive for nearly two centuries regardless of political and social considerations - has with time become world-famous. It is due to the trumpet that the name of Serbia has resounded worldwide, on all continents. The virtuoso music performers, the trumpet players that compete are in the most part self-taught. They play by ear and quite spontaneously, relying on their musical memory; they play from their hearts and souls, and their music reaches out to listeners precisely because of this. The Guča Sabor (Gathering) of Trumpet Players continues to grow year after year. Today, this musical feast of recognizable national skills is more popular, more diverse and bigger than ever before.

With considerable experience in organizing Assemblies, today the traditionally hospitable Guča has earned its place on the map of world music festivals, inviting high interest from ethno music lovers, and deservedly so. As an internationally recognized trumpet capital, and a singular corner of positive energy, a place with accumulated joy, gaiety and spontaneity, coupled with the piercing yet gentle sound of the trumpet, Guča is a place of catharsis of the heart and soul while the festival lasts. All this is more than enough to attract visitors to Guča from Mexico, Spain, Greece, Denmark, China and other countries. The names of Boban Marković, Ekrem Sajdić, Elvis Ajdinović, Fejat and Zoran Sejdić have carried the glory of the Serbian trumpet across the world.[10]

  • Official website of the Guča trumpet festival

Characteristics edit

The sound of the trumpet traditionally accompanies every major event in Serbia's rural and small communities' life: births, baptisms, weddings, slava (family patron saint day), farewell parties for those joining military service, state and church festivals, harvesting, reaping, and also funerals. Appropriate music is played on these occasions, thus preserving the spirit of the existing tradition. The music is very diverse: from indigenous melodies, like kolo {a fast-rhythm chain dance}, marches and characteristic southern Serbia čoček dances, all the way to tunes that have emerged more recently, but always taking care to honour old harmonies. This music has won over the hearts of not only the local population, but has also warmed the hearts of many foreigners. In the several days of the Guča Festival, hardly anyone can resist giving themselves to the adrenalin-rushing rhythms and melodies that simply force one to jump to one's feet and dance.[10]

It is estimated that in 1961-2017 period, the festival had 16 million visitors.[11]

Recent festivals edit

 
Orkestar Danijela playing at the Guča trumpet parade in August 2005.
  • 2001 - 2001 was the first time ever that a musician, Boban Marković, got the highest mark from every jury member. Since then, Boban decided not to compete any more. Instead he performs three or four songs as a special guest at each festival thereafter. Attending the competition this year, among other dignitaries, were Princess Katherine of Yugoslavia (from the line of Black George, to whose uprising the music can be traced), and Zoran Đinđić, the prime minister.[12]
  • 2002 - Attendance record was set in 2002, when Guča hosted in excess of 300,000 visitors.
  • 2005 - A documentary about the festival was filmed at the 2005 event. In a visit to festival came Kiera Chaplin granddaughter of Charlie Chaplin.

The majority of the 1500 participants of the 46th festival were Romani from around the region. Serbian brewery MB, the main sponsor of the 2006 festival, reported beer sales of 4,000 hectoliters, or more than 700,000 British pints. The event has also become lucrative for various travel agencies throughout Europe.[13] While visiting the festival, Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica stated:

Guča represents in a best way what Serbia is today - its openness, belief in oneself, hospitality, party and music. The trumpet festival is a confirmation of our courage and joy, both in good and bad times. It represents our people's return to our roots, joy and meaning of life. It speaks about who we are, what we are, and of our urges. We express our joy and sadness with the trumpet, we are born with sounds of the trumpets, and we are buried with sounds of the trumpets. Guča is a Serbian brand, it's a value which represents Serbia in the world. Those who don't understand Guča can't understand Serbia. If became a Member State of the EU without our melodies and colours, that wouldn't be the real Serbia.

  • 2007 - On 10 August Goran Bregović who popularised the Serbian trumpet sound and Balkan ethno music internationally, performed at Guča.
  • 2020 - In April, the festival was rescheduled from August to October due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[14] However, in July the 2020 edition was cancelled completely, for the first time in festival's almost 60 years long history.[15]

Notable participants edit

 
The Guča trumpeter statue

In 2010 the organizers issued invitations to Russia and U.S., Dmitry Medvedev and Barack Obama, and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, to attend the 50th anniversary event.

Winners edit

In time, four awards distinguished themselves as the most important. In the descending order of importance, they are: best orchestra, first trumpet, folk playing (all awarded by the jury) and Golden trumpet (voted by the audience). Every performer with three wins in any of the categories is being declared a "master of trumpet". The rules were amended in 2017, so now two of those three wins have to be awards given by the jury. This was done as some very young players won several audience awards due to their popularity. Milovan Babić is considered the most successful performer of all times, with 11 wins in all four categories (from 1972 to 2003). Based on points (awarding 4, 3, 2 and 1 point according to the importance of the award), the list of the most successful trumpeters for the 1961-2018 period is:[9][16]

  • 1. 32 points - Fejat Sejdić (1941-2017) ("The master of Guča for all times")
  • 2. 28 points - Milovan Babić (1950)
  • 3. 27 points - Slobodan Salijević (1965)
  • 4. 25 points - Bakija Bakić (1923–89)
  • 5. 24 points - Raka Kostić (1927–94)
  • 6. 22 points - Svetozar Lazović (1952)
  • 7. 21 points - Boban Marković (1964)
  • 8. 21 points - Milovan Petrović (????)
  • 9. 20 points - Dejan Petrović (1985; son of Milovan)
  • 10. 18 points - Ekrem Mamutović sr (1942-2008; later changed name to Milan Mladenović)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Serbia: The Guca and Exit Music Festivals by Ljubisa Bojic
  2. ^ a b c d Gvozden Otašević (6 August 2017), "Saborovanje u Guči - Od vojne do narodne muzike", Politika (in Serbian), p. 13
  3. ^ Gvozden Otašević (6 August 2017), "Saborovanje u Guči - Momo Kapor o Guči", Politika (in Serbian), p. 12
  4. ^ Leksikon jugoslovenske muzike - Dragačevski sabor (sabor trubača). Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod "Miroslav Krleža". 1984.
  5. ^ Gvozden Otašević (6 August 2017), "Saborovanje u Guči - Ideja novinara "Politike" Blagoja Radivojevića", Politika (in Serbian), p. 13
  6. ^ Miloš Lazić (13 August 2017), "Senke Dragačeva - Neizmiren dug", Politika (in Serbian), p. 09
  7. ^ B.Bojović (10 August 2010). "Spomenik prvom majstoru trube". Blic (in Serbian).
  8. ^ Gvozden Otašević (17 December 2017), "Oni su pisali istoriju Guče" [They wrote the history of Guča], Politika (in Serbian), p. 20
  9. ^ a b Gvozden Otašević (6 August 2017), "Saborovanje u Guči - Kad truba zagrmi", Politika (in Serbian), pp. 01 & 12
  10. ^ a b "Guca Trumpet Festival 2021".
  11. ^ Gvozden Otašević (18 August 2017), "Maksimir u Dragačevu", Politika (in Serbian), p. 09
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-08-12. Retrieved 2007-07-15.
  13. ^ "Serbia: Guca and Exit Music Festivals". 14 September 2006.
  14. ^ Beta (16 April 2020). "Sabor trubača u Guči odložen za oktobar" [Guča trumpet festival rescheduled for October] (in Serbian). N1.
  15. ^ Beta (8 July 2020). "Otkazan Sabor trubača u Guči" [Guča trumpet festival canceled] (in Serbian). N1.
  16. ^ Gvozden Otašević (6 August 2017), "Saborovanje u Guči - Pobednici", Politika (in Serbian), p. 12

Sources edit

  • Bojanić, Z. M. (2002). Guča, svetska prestonica trube. Edidžija "Zvezdano nebo". Beograd: Udruženje nezavisnih izdavača knjiga.
  • Boban Markovic Orkester. (2002). Live in Belgrade: the best trumpet of guca.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • UnOfficial Festival website guca.rs
  • Official website Lucani municipality
  • UnOfficial website gucha.com
  • 2007 Guča documentary film premiere showing how people invade the sleepy village of Guča for a week of music, drinking, dancing and utter madness
  • BBC News - Serbian town has much to trumpet
  • Guca 2010 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen
  • Guca 2011 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen
  • Guca 2012 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen
  • Guca 2013 Photo Gallery I by Marien van Bezooijen
  • Guca 2013 Photo Gallery II by Marien van Bezooijen
  • Guca 2014 Photo Gallery I by Marien van Bezooijen

43°46′35″N 20°13′55″E / 43.77639°N 20.23194°E / 43.77639; 20.23194

guča, trumpet, festival, serbian, Фестивал, трубача, Гучи, romanized, festival, trubača, guči, also, known, dragačevski, sabor, serbian, Драгачевски, сабор, dragačevo, fair, fete, gathering, assembly, pronounced, draɡǎːtʃeʋskiː, sǎːbor, annual, balkan, brass, . The Guca Trumpet Festival Serbian Festival trubacha u Guchi romanized Festival trubaca u Guci also known as the Dragacevski Sabor Serbian Dragachevski sabor or Dragacevo Fair Fete Gathering or Assembly pronounced draɡǎːtʃeʋskiː sǎːbor is an annual Balkan brass band festival held in the town of Guca near the city of Cacak 1 in the Dragacevo region of western Serbia Guca is a three hour bus ride from Belgrade Guca Trumpet FestivalThe Guca trumpeter statueLocation s Guca SerbiaYears active1961 presentWebsitegucafestival rs 600 000 visitors make their way to the town of 2 000 inhabitants every year both from Serbia and abroad Elimination heats are held earlier in the year and only a few dozen bands qualify to compete Guca s official festival has three parts Friday s opening concert Saturday night s celebrations and Sunday s competition The Friday s concerts are held at the entrance to the official Guca Festival building This event features previous winners each band getting to play three tunes while folk dancers all kitted out in bright knitting patterns dance kolos and oros in front of a hyped up audience Contents 1 History 1 1 Trumpet in Serbia 1 2 Festival 1 3 Characteristics 2 Recent festivals 3 Notable participants 3 1 Winners 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Scene from Boban Markovic concert in 2008 Trumpet in Serbia edit Though today considered a typical traditional instrument in Serbian folk music trumpet entered folk music in full only at the beginning of the 20th century Records show that trumpeters were part of the Serbian army of prince Stefan Vojislav which defeated the Byzantines in the Battle of Bar on the Rumija mountain in 1042 Together with the drummers they are mentioned being in the armies of prince Lazar Hrebeljanovic and his successors despots Stefan Lazarevic and Đurađ Brankovic in the 14th and 15th century In all that period trumpet was only used as a military instrument 2 As Serbia was liberated from the Ottomans after the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815 Serbian prince Milos Obrenovic formed the band at his court in Kragujevac As the new state was still under heavy Ottoman influence the band played oriental music It was headed by the very popular violin and zurna player Mustafa He was titled oberlautar chief singer or in Serbian bukadzija which literally means the noise maker In order to westernize the state prince Milos dismissed Mustafa in 1831 and invited Josif Slezinger 1794 1870 a musician and composer from Sombor to form the first military orchestra with the European instruments so the trumpet was returned to the orchestras 2 The trumpet became popular in the villages of Serbia during the late 19th century Author Momo Kapor wrote In Serbia who from old times new about gusle shepherd flutes flutes and dvojnice the trumpets were accepted after the Serbo Turkish wars in the late 19th century when the company and regimental trumpeters returned to their villages bringing with them their hit dented beaten and often bullet pierced trumpets 3 After the World War I it became the most popular folk instrument suppressing the previously dominant gaida and violin in folk music called cemane The amateur players were originally taught by the former professional military trumpeters like Momir Miletic Momir Subotic and Dojcilo Đukic The village orchestras were mostly disbanded during the World War II but after 1945 they were renewed 2 4 In time three schools of brass music developed eastern Zajecar Boljevac southern Vranje Surdulica Vladicin Han and western Uzice Cacak Pozega Festival edit The idea for the festival came from the reporter of Politika Blagoje Radivojevic 1925 2016 He was correspondent from Cacak where in 1961 he noticed a band of trumpeters playing the farewell to the brigade of the Youth work actions at Cacak s railway station He suggested to the local administration in the Lucani municipality to which the region of Dragacevo and the town of Guca administratively belong to add the trumpeters as the special musical heritage of this part of Serbia to the already existing festival Dragacevo through sing and dance The suggestion evolved into the separate trumpet festival 5 Radivojevic with the help of author Branko V Radicevic sr unsuccessfully urged many individuals and organizations in order to gain the support for the project until they made contact with one of highest authorities in Serbia at the time a politician and former intelligence officer Slobodan Penezic Krcun He allowed it but warned them all right but I don t want to hear about any Serbian nationalism there dobro ali nemoj da cujem da je bilo nekakvog srbovanja 6 The inaugural festival was held on 16 October 1961 in the churchyard of the Church of St Michael and St Gabriel in Guca with 4 orchestras from the neighboring villages competing The winner was Desimir Perisic 1919 83 who is as of 2017 still the only local musician who won the competition He was nicknamed Dragacevo s Harry James On 10 August 2010 a monument to Perisic was dedicated on the new roundabout at the entrance into Guca from Lucani direction Author of the entire project was Olivera Jolovic while the 3 m 9 8 ft tall statue is work of Velimir Karavelic 2 7 At the first festival each band had to play five songs Two obligatory were Sa Ovcara i Kablara and Bledi mesec zagrlio zvezdu danicu plus two kolos and a march by choice 8 nbsp Guca Trumpet Festival visitors in 2014 The festival gained a wider popularity since 1970 when it became more present in the media That year it was described as a different colorful village Serbia open for all well meaning people no matter where they come from Today apart from the regular brass orchestras the competition also includes the children and youth orchestras By 2017 it grew into the largest trumpet festival third ethno festival and one of the 15 largest festivals in the world In Serbia it gained a reputation of an unofficial state celebration 9 Initially it was a very modest Assembly almost subversive for the prevailing political circumstances of the time However the Assembly gradually grew and expanded its magical influence and over the past ten or so years has become the folk remained its key symbol and raison d etre It is no longer held solely for the trumpet players It has grown into a gathering of toastmasters painters The song Sa Ovcara i Kablara marks the beginning of the festival each year Some church music festivals notwithstanding the Assembly of Trumpet Players is the best known event of this kind extending uninterruptedly for 43 years and attracting guests and musicians alike from every continent Trumpet players and Folk Song and Dance groups from around the world feel it a great honor to be invited to the Assembly and the number of visitors increases with each coming year The village of Guca has gained world fame owing to its Assembly of Trumpet Players the largest trumpet event on the planet The traditional Dragacevo Trumpet its cult kept alive for nearly two centuries regardless of political and social considerations has with time become world famous It is due to the trumpet that the name of Serbia has resounded worldwide on all continents The virtuoso music performers the trumpet players that compete are in the most part self taught They play by ear and quite spontaneously relying on their musical memory they play from their hearts and souls and their music reaches out to listeners precisely because of this The Guca Sabor Gathering of Trumpet Players continues to grow year after year Today this musical feast of recognizable national skills is more popular more diverse and bigger than ever before With considerable experience in organizing Assemblies today the traditionally hospitable Guca has earned its place on the map of world music festivals inviting high interest from ethno music lovers and deservedly so As an internationally recognized trumpet capital and a singular corner of positive energy a place with accumulated joy gaiety and spontaneity coupled with the piercing yet gentle sound of the trumpet Guca is a place of catharsis of the heart and soul while the festival lasts All this is more than enough to attract visitors to Guca from Mexico Spain Greece Denmark China and other countries The names of Boban Markovic Ekrem Sajdic Elvis Ajdinovic Fejat and Zoran Sejdic have carried the glory of the Serbian trumpet across the world 10 Official website of the Guca trumpet festival Characteristics edit The sound of the trumpet traditionally accompanies every major event in Serbia s rural and small communities life births baptisms weddings slava family patron saint day farewell parties for those joining military service state and church festivals harvesting reaping and also funerals Appropriate music is played on these occasions thus preserving the spirit of the existing tradition The music is very diverse from indigenous melodies like kolo a fast rhythm chain dance marches and characteristic southern Serbia cocek dances all the way to tunes that have emerged more recently but always taking care to honour old harmonies This music has won over the hearts of not only the local population but has also warmed the hearts of many foreigners In the several days of the Guca Festival hardly anyone can resist giving themselves to the adrenalin rushing rhythms and melodies that simply force one to jump to one s feet and dance 10 It is estimated that in 1961 2017 period the festival had 16 million visitors 11 Recent festivals edit nbsp Orkestar Danijela playing at the Guca trumpet parade in August 2005 2001 2001 was the first time ever that a musician Boban Markovic got the highest mark from every jury member Since then Boban decided not to compete any more Instead he performs three or four songs as a special guest at each festival thereafter Attending the competition this year among other dignitaries were Princess Katherine of Yugoslavia from the line of Black George to whose uprising the music can be traced and Zoran Đinđic the prime minister 12 2002 Attendance record was set in 2002 when Guca hosted in excess of 300 000 visitors 2005 A documentary about the festival was filmed at the 2005 event In a visit to festival came Kiera Chaplin granddaughter of Charlie Chaplin The majority of the 1500 participants of the 46th festival were Romani from around the region Serbian brewery MB the main sponsor of the 2006 festival reported beer sales of 4 000 hectoliters or more than 700 000 British pints The event has also become lucrative for various travel agencies throughout Europe 13 While visiting the festival Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica stated Guca represents in a best way what Serbia is today its openness belief in oneself hospitality party and music The trumpet festival is a confirmation of our courage and joy both in good and bad times It represents our people s return to our roots joy and meaning of life It speaks about who we are what we are and of our urges We express our joy and sadness with the trumpet we are born with sounds of the trumpets and we are buried with sounds of the trumpets Guca is a Serbian brand it s a value which represents Serbia in the world Those who don t understand Guca can t understand Serbia If became a Member State of the EU without our melodies and colours that wouldn t be the real Serbia 2007 On 10 August Goran Bregovic who popularised the Serbian trumpet sound and Balkan ethno music internationally performed at Guca 2020 In April the festival was rescheduled from August to October due to the COVID 19 pandemic 14 However in July the 2020 edition was cancelled completely for the first time in festival s almost 60 years long history 15 Notable participants edit nbsp The Guca trumpeter statue Boban Markovic Orchestra Goran Bregovic In 2010 the organizers issued invitations to Russia and U S Dmitry Medvedev and Barack Obama and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to attend the 50th anniversary event Winners edit In time four awards distinguished themselves as the most important In the descending order of importance they are best orchestra first trumpet folk playing all awarded by the jury and Golden trumpet voted by the audience Every performer with three wins in any of the categories is being declared a master of trumpet The rules were amended in 2017 so now two of those three wins have to be awards given by the jury This was done as some very young players won several audience awards due to their popularity Milovan Babic is considered the most successful performer of all times with 11 wins in all four categories from 1972 to 2003 Based on points awarding 4 3 2 and 1 point according to the importance of the award the list of the most successful trumpeters for the 1961 2018 period is 9 16 1 32 points Fejat Sejdic 1941 2017 The master of Guca for all times 2 28 points Milovan Babic 1950 3 27 points Slobodan Salijevic 1965 4 25 points Bakija Bakic 1923 89 5 24 points Raka Kostic 1927 94 6 22 points Svetozar Lazovic 1952 7 21 points Boban Markovic 1964 8 21 points Milovan Petrovic 9 20 points Dejan Petrovic 1985 son of Milovan 10 18 points Ekrem Mamutovic sr 1942 2008 later changed name to Milan Mladenovic See also editBalkan brassReferences edit Serbia The Guca and Exit Music Festivals by Ljubisa Bojic a b c d Gvozden Otasevic 6 August 2017 Saborovanje u Guci Od vojne do narodne muzike Politika in Serbian p 13 Gvozden Otasevic 6 August 2017 Saborovanje u Guci Momo Kapor o Guci Politika in Serbian p 12 Leksikon jugoslovenske muzike Dragacevski sabor sabor trubaca Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleza 1984 Gvozden Otasevic 6 August 2017 Saborovanje u Guci Ideja novinara Politike Blagoja Radivojevica Politika in Serbian p 13 Milos Lazic 13 August 2017 Senke Dragaceva Neizmiren dug Politika in Serbian p 09 B Bojovic 10 August 2010 Spomenik prvom majstoru trube Blic in Serbian Gvozden Otasevic 17 December 2017 Oni su pisali istoriju Guce They wrote the history of Guca Politika in Serbian p 20 a b Gvozden Otasevic 6 August 2017 Saborovanje u Guci Kad truba zagrmi Politika in Serbian pp 01 amp 12 a b Guca Trumpet Festival 2021 Gvozden Otasevic 18 August 2017 Maksimir u Dragacevu Politika in Serbian p 09 New York Times Serbian Music Article Archived from the original on 2007 08 12 Retrieved 2007 07 15 Serbia Guca and Exit Music Festivals 14 September 2006 Beta 16 April 2020 Sabor trubaca u Guci odlozen za oktobar Guca trumpet festival rescheduled for October in Serbian N1 Beta 8 July 2020 Otkazan Sabor trubaca u Guci Guca trumpet festival canceled in Serbian N1 Gvozden Otasevic 6 August 2017 Saborovanje u Guci Pobednici Politika in Serbian p 12Sources editBojanic Z M 2002 Guca svetska prestonica trube Edidzija Zvezdano nebo Beograd Udruzenje nezavisnih izdavaca knjiga Boban Markovic Orkester 2002 Live in Belgrade the best trumpet of guca External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guca trumpet festival Official website UnOfficial Festival website guca rs Official website Lucani municipality Official 2006 website UnOfficial website gucha com 2007 Guca documentary film premiere showing how people invade the sleepy village of Guca for a week of music drinking dancing and utter madness BBC News Serbian town has much to trumpet Gucha presentation at FDS Guca 2010 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen Guca 2011 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen Guca 2012 Photo Gallery by Marien van Bezooijen Guca 2013 Photo Gallery I by Marien van Bezooijen Guca 2013 Photo Gallery II by Marien van Bezooijen Guca 2014 Photo Gallery I by Marien van Bezooijen 43 46 35 N 20 13 55 E 43 77639 N 20 23194 E 43 77639 20 23194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guca Trumpet Festival amp oldid 1182978346, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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