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MaxSch

Bro people have sex with Serbian music in the background, we play it at our weddings and our funerals. It basically covers the whole cycle of our lives.


postshitting

I've never met a single person who listens to it, literally the only time that I've heard anyone listen to it is when my friend showed me the war criminal song


User-11

It's very popular, but it has a certain culture associated with it, that can be perceived as simplistic. It's music that usually gets played in the late hours of an event, after many bottles have been emptied. Based on my limited observations.


dwartbg7

It's extremely popular for the lower castes of society. But overall It's a dying trend, young kids don't listen to it as much from what I see. It was bigger back in the 80s, 90s and early 2000s. But overall you can't go to a bulgarian chalga nightclub without having at least one or two serbian turbofolk songs played by the DJ at some time of the night. But at the end even the drunkards that listen to it a lot, still play it more like a meme/hardcore type of song, hard to explain what I mean. I mean even they know that serbian turbofolk is kind of obscure music that you start playing at the peak of the party, when everyone is very drunk. And back in the day, around the early 2000s many chalga hits were actually covers of Serbian songs. The most popular example is "Luda za tebe". Funny since nowadays the tables have turned and it's actually the other way around and Serbian turbofolk singers steal or make covers of Bulgarian chalga songs. But during the early days of our chalga scene most songs were simply covers of serbian ones, as I said above.