uma nea
sarajevo—amsterdam
marine ecology
subota 16. maj, sabah zorom u 10, moja sevdah lista uz pokoju besjedu i miris kahve na talasima @operator.radio
hajde dođite da sevdišemo zajedno 🎶
discover the bosnian blues as i share my finest, softest sevdah picks tomorrow morning, may 16th 10.00-12.00 live on @operator.radio
sipping coffee is advisable as it will start to taste much better the moment bosnian sevdalinka arrives into your ears
the subtle alteration to your saturday morning routine you didn’t know you needed
tune in 🔉🔉🔉
special thanks @yag0__s for inviting me to her monthly program, “light and shadow” ⭐️

subota 16. maj, sabah zorom u 10, moja sevdah lista uz pokoju besjedu i miris kahve na talasima @operator.radio
hajde dođite da sevdišemo zajedno 🎶
discover the bosnian blues as i share my finest, softest sevdah picks tomorrow morning, may 16th 10.00-12.00 live on @operator.radio
sipping coffee is advisable as it will start to taste much better the moment bosnian sevdalinka arrives into your ears
the subtle alteration to your saturday morning routine you didn’t know you needed
tune in 🔉🔉🔉
special thanks @yag0__s for inviting me to her monthly program, “light and shadow” ⭐️

subota 16. maj, sabah zorom u 10, moja sevdah lista uz pokoju besjedu i miris kahve na talasima @operator.radio
hajde dođite da sevdišemo zajedno 🎶
discover the bosnian blues as i share my finest, softest sevdah picks tomorrow morning, may 16th 10.00-12.00 live on @operator.radio
sipping coffee is advisable as it will start to taste much better the moment bosnian sevdalinka arrives into your ears
the subtle alteration to your saturday morning routine you didn’t know you needed
tune in 🔉🔉🔉
special thanks @yag0__s for inviting me to her monthly program, “light and shadow” ⭐️

in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack

in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack

in no other city in the world would I rather share the music of Adi Lukovac than in Bristol... a place that has long been the epicentre of all sorts of leftfield electronic output and dub influences
an independent community radio “radio ZID” from sarajevo (“the wall”) fed the souls of sarajevans hungry for music during and after the siege. ZID was the corridor into the “outside world’s” sonic dimension; it cultivated the atmosphere and cultural current out of which the brilliant music of Adi Lukovac emerged.
Adi was the pioneer of BH electronic sound, sometimes referred to as post-Dayton electronica. while his work echoes these global contemporary musical influences, it remains imbued with the deeply Bosnian sentiment that we call “sevdah” or “sevdalinka”- a traditional Bosnian song form
20 years ago we lost Adi, and I often wonder how his musical journey could have evolved, how he might have shaped or reshaped the Sarajevo underground had he been alive today.
I had the honour of sharing his music on @noodsradio during my time in Bristol recently. just as Bristol sound once arrived to besieged Sarajevo, i hope to send something back from Sarajevo to Bristol and beyond ?
biig thanks to noods for the space to share something special and personal<3
link is in bio
here are some awkward clips with an amazing soundtrack
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
In case you’ve missed it, @_umanea her set is up! Tune in for some heavy hitters. iob ni knil 🔗
Find her playing tunes @laak.club 🛁 stage coming saturday. Dub sounds suspiciously good in small tiled rooms..
DJ, selector and marine biologist @_umanea moves between systems. Her selections drift through dub-adjacent spaces, breakbeats and leftfield club, unfolding in dense, layered arrangements.
For this one, she keeps it slower. Dub, leftfield and house / keeping it low, slanted & slightly slinky.
Tune in this Saturday 14:00PM 🔗 iob ni knil

DJ, selector and marine biologist @_umanea moves between systems. Her selections drift through dub-adjacent spaces, breakbeats and leftfield club, unfolding in dense, layered arrangements.
For this one, she keeps it slower. Dub, leftfield and house / keeping it low, slanted & slightly slinky.
Tune in this Saturday 14:00PM 🔗 iob ni knil

parents wedding day in the summer of 1993
captured by @milomirkovacevicstrasni during the siege of sarajevo

July 20th
@_umanea (dj)
Ocean drift
loose trip hop, viscous bass, warm distortion, with the occasional glint of something weightless. umanea takes the long way through an ocean drift, trailing cave-borne reverb.
From 20.30
@bartheoamsterdam

shedding layers of dub, trip hop, post-club, pre and post-dayton peace treaty sentiments, this saturday noon live from BXL on our beloved @kiosk.radio :3
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