The cult Croatian rock band Let 3 will perform at the fourth edition of Rockstriction on Saturday, September 9, on the plateau behind the building of the Montenegrin Cinema and Music Center, starting at 9 p.m.
Known for their shocking performances, the controversial people from Rijeka are coming to Podgorica again after ten years. Tickets, priced at €10, will go on sale on Monday 21 August.
After the fantastic first edition of Rockstrictija, where the performances of Nikola Vranjković and Autogeno training delighted the audience, the second Rockstrictija, where Bjesov and Vrpca performed, definitely set new standards when it comes to rock and roll in Montenegro. The third Rockstrikcija brought the Croatian garage punk rock duo Šiza, accompanied by representatives of the Montenegrin alternative scene Alternaiva and Punkreas.
From the founding of the band in 1987 until the early 90s and the bloody breakup of Yugoslavia, Let 3 was an angry alternative aimed at those who grew up on punk and post-punk. Exceptional texts, always a perfect performance level, naked performances, lying down performance, dramaturgical and stylistic refinement of concerts and public performances in general, musical specificity always accompanied by sharp humor and a sense of the bizarre, are just some of the characteristics of the unique musical phenomenon called Let 3.
Although the band became recognizable during its multi-decade career for provocative performances that aroused stormy polemics, their performance at this year's Dora, in which rockets were also on stage, caused a real storm in the public. It was speculated for days what the name of the song, as well as the lyrics, even mean, and then the rockers themselves discovered that the song "Mama, shh!" has an anti-war message. Rockers from Rijeka have as many as 3.3 million views on the YouTube channel of the Eurovision Song Contest.
M.J.