Showing posts with label Kutina Croatia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kutina Croatia. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Rock and Roll In War Torn Croatia

Wanda Chrome Tour
This is part of my 1999 Wanda Chrome Tour Diary.  We played rock and roll shows in Croatia and Slovenia that year.  As we worked our way south and east into Croatia, we were exposed to towns and villages that were still pretty beat up from the war that had "ended" just a couple years prior. This is part of one of three.

Our show for the night was in an abandoned Yugoslavian army base, in a small village on the Croatian - Bosnian border.  Many buildings in the nearby villages were heavily pocked with small arms fire, while others had been blown to their foundations by indiscriminate shelling.  The destruction was nothing new to us, as this was show number nine on the Balkan leg of our musical tour.
As we pulled off the gravel road leading to a few squat, nearly windowless barracks, our headlights shone on a dozen men dressed in fatigues and huddled close to a fire.   The men were drinking moonshine, visibly drunk, not looking friendly.  We got out of the van and approached the circle of men to offer up handshakes. They were frying chicken parts over that fire.  The meat was bubbling in cooking oil, in a shallow metal garbage can lid that was upturned like a bowl.  One of the men pulled away from the fire with two fistfuls of meat. He introduced himself as Nico, the head of our security detail.  Nico handed us meat to share amongst ourselves, as this was our dinner for the night.
We were encouraged to huddle close to the fire and drink their moonshine.  It was close to freezing that night and the sky was spitting droplets of ice that stung on our faces and exposed hands. Passing the bottle without drinking from it caused a few of the men to laugh at me and make comments in Serbo-Croatian.  I never drink alcohol before a show, but that explanation was certainly not going to work with these drunken men.  Each time the bottle came my way I falsely tried to explain that I have an ulcer and cannot drink.  They would laugh and shove the bottle back against my chest and say “You DRINK”!  I put the bottle to my lips and pretended to drink.
The grease covered meat in my hand was half-cooked.  I certainly couldn’t disrespect these men and refuse my dinner, so I pretended to eat a few bites and then tossed the meat into the surrounding darkness at a moment of distraction.  By the time we were shown the stage area, Eric our driver was trying his best to stay upright.   Croatian moonshine and half-cooked chicken warmed him up nicely.       
The stage was set up in the camp cafeteria and resembled other squat clubs we’d played in; with dim lighting and filthy couches placed along graffiti covered walls.  We were warned not to sit on the couches until someone rousted the rats out from the cushions.


US Rock Band Attracts Cops And Drug Sniffing Dogs

Nico recommended that we stay close to the camp, and perhaps even stay in the dressing room until the local police walked through with their drug-sniffing dogs.  The police had not arrived yet, but we were told that they were sure to come by because we were an American band.  
The music hall was once the camp cafeteria, and the dressing room was the butchering area of the kitchen.  The floors and walls were covered in ceramic tile, making the room seem colder than it already was. A tiny, free standing heater in the corner of the room was tring its best to chase away the chill.  Eric sat on it for a second, not knowing that it was hot enough to burn. He was too drunk to notice at first, but jumped up and howeled as his jeans nearly caught fire.

We were given two loaves of bread and a case of beer to drink.  I passed on the bread since it had dried up and hardened, as if it had been placed on the grimy table hours prior to our arrival.  There was no running water or restrooms in the place, and our bass player had to be driven to a nearby bakery that had agreed to open up just so she could relieve herself.  For the rest of the night, she would have to head out into the nearby brush.   As the evening progressed, two local bands had managed to warm up the building and the crowd that gathered.       
Meanwhile, our little dressing room had become crowded with security guards, a local television crew, a burned out Croatian rock singer, and half a dozen other rock and roll fans that were very eager to party with everyone else.  For a brief moment, I felt invisible to the circus that danced and shone all around me.  I began to feel at home with all these people and their drunken smiles.  I mentioned to my new friend standing next to me that this place was a bit chaotic.  He replied, “You are in the heart of anarchy right now, anything goes”.
Finally, it was our turn to play.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Worst Gig Ever | Rock and Roll In Croatia


Second in my Worst Gig Ever series goes to a rock show in Kutina Croatia. The people of Kutina were gracious, mostly. The fans loved our band. They loved us too much, if you ask me. Why is it part of my Worst series? Let me present the evidence.

Stale Bread and Chicken Parts for the Band

We knew that we were not going to get all the items on our performance rider. We don't expect that to happen every night. Two loaves of old bread, and a case of Tuborg Gold was waiting for us in the "dressing room." Outside, they were frying chicken parts in a shallow garbage can lid over an open fire. That was our dinner.

Rats in the Club

The couches needed to be pounded out before anyone sat on them. Rats tended to move in when the club was closed. A good kicking rousted a couple of rats from the couch, but nobody was brave enough to sit on it afterwords.

Drug Sniffing Dogs Sweep Through the Club

Once the local authorities got word that an American band was playing in their town, they dispatched drug sniffing dogs to the club to make sure that we weren't bringing the worst of what America has to offer. No drugs were found. After the near strip search at the border, it was a guarantee that we had no contraband.

Violent Rock Fans

Even with two bouncers on either side of the stage, I didn't quite make it through the show unscathed. A fan spun out from the mosh pit, tripped onto the stage and took out half of my drum set. Our singer got popped in the teeth when his microphone was kicked into his mouth. He stood on the microphone stand for the rest of the night. Our bass player was smart enough to kick people out of her way. Girls can get away with that move.
Our driver/merch guy caught someone trying to steal an empty cd case. When he grabbed the guys arm, the thief spun around and head butted him in the mouth. A scuffle broke out, but it was quickly broken up.

Passports Confiscated at Bullet Riddled Hotel

No matter what anyone tells you, do not give up your passports to anyone, unless it's four a.m. and you are being bullied by a 6'4" 300 hotel operator. If that's what's keeping you from your warm bed, by all means give him what he wants.
I counted the bullet holes in the lobby ceiling. I pointed them out to our guide, and he said "someone must have gotten excited." Just then, a woman with legs hairier than mine walked over with an espresso.