WikiMili
List of Bosniak musicians
Last updated
March 02, 2025
This is a
list of
Bosniak
composers, musical groups, musicians and singers
:
Contents
Composers
Genre
Opera
Pop
Rock
Rap
Sevdalinka
Folk
Guitarist
Lutenist
Songwriters
Trumpeter
See also
References
External links
Composers
Alexander von Zemlinsky
(1871–1942), Austrian composer and conductor who had a Bosniak maternal grandmother
Dino Zonić
, composer and conductor
Ismet Alajbegović Šerbo
(1925–1987), composer, songwriter and accordionist
Genre
Opera
Sandra Bagarić
(born 1979)
Jasmin Bašić
(born 1971)
Aida Čorbadžić
(born 1976)
Bahrija Nuri Hadžić
(1904–1993)
Pop
Dino Merlin, leading pop singer
Anabela Atijas
(born 1975), father was a Bosniak
Adnan Babajić
(born 1988)
Alma Čardžić
(born 1968)
Amila Glamočak
(born 1966)
Dalal Midhat-Talakić
(born 1981)
Danijel Alibabić
, Montenegrin singer with a Bosniak father
Deen
(born 1982)
Denial Ahmetović
(born 1995)
Dino Merlin
(born 1962)
Donna Ares
(1977–2017)
Dženy
(born 1987)
Eldin Huseinbegović
(born 1978)
Elvir Mekić
(born 1981)
Emina Jahović
(born 1982)
Fazla
(born 1967)
Kemal Monteno
(1948–2015)
Lepa Brena
(born 1960)
Maya Sar
(born 1981)
Marija Šerifović
(born 1984), has Bosniak ancestry through her father
[
1
]
Mirza Šoljanin
(born 1985)
Nino Pršeš
Peter Nalitch
(born 1981), Russian singer whose grandfather was a Bosniak
Rialda
(born 1992)
Sabahudin Kurt
(1935–2018)
Seka Aleksić
(born 1981), mother was a Bosniak
Selma Bajrami
(born 1980), mother was a Bosniak
Selma Muhedinović
(born 1972)
Senidah
(born 1985), Slovenian singer whose parents were Bosniaks
Zuzi Zu
(born 1978)
Rock
Alen Islamović
(born 1957)
Branko Đurić
(born 1962), mother was a Bosniak
Cem Adrian
(born 1980), Turkish singer of Bosniak ancestry
Elvir Laković Laka
(born 1969)
Hari Varešanović
(born 1961)
Sead Lipovača
(born 1955)
Seid Memić
(born 1950)
Rap
Buba Corelli
(born 1989)
Edo Maajka
(born 1978)
Frenkie
(born 1982)
Jala Brat
(born 1986)
Sevdalinka
Umihana Čuvidina (1794–1870), a 19th-century poet who sang some of her poems as
sevdalinkas
Beba Selimović
(1936–2020)
Damir Imamović
(born 1978)
Dina Bajraktarević
(born 1953)
Emina Zečaj
(1929–2020)
Hanka Paldum
(born 1956)
Himzo Polovina
(1927–1986), father was a Bosniak
Meho Puzić
(1937–2007)
Mirsada Bajraktarević
(1951–1976)
Rešad Bešlagić
(1909–1945)
Safet Isović
(1936–2007)
Silvana Armenulić
(1938–1976)
Umihana Čuvidina
(1794–1870)
Zaim Imamović
(1920–1994)
Zehra Deović
(1938–2015)
Zekerijah Đezić
(1937–2002)
Folk
Al' Dino
(born 1970), singer-songwriter and composer
Asim Brkan
(born 1954)
Elvidin Krilić
(born 1962)
Elvira Rahić
(born 1975)
Enes Begović
(born 1965)
Esad Plavi
(born 1965)
Halid Bešlić
(born 1953)
Halid Muslimović
(born 1960)
Haris Džinović
(born 1951)
Jasmin Muharemović
(born 1965)
Kemal Malovčić
(born 1946)
Osman Hadžić
(born 1966)
Nihad Alibegović
(born 1962)
Nino Rešić
(1964–2007)
Sanela Sijerčić
(born 1976)
Šaban Šaulić
(1951–2019)
Šako Polumenta
(born 1960)
Šemsa Suljaković
(born 1949)
Šerif Konjević
(born 1957)
Zehra Bajraktarević (born 1968)
Guitarist
Denis Azabagić
(born 1972), classical guitarist
Lutenist
Edin Karamazov
(born 1965)
Songwriters
Edo Mulahalilović
(1964–2010)
Fahrudin Pecikoza
(born 1962)
Trumpeter
See also
List of Bosniaks
List of Bosniak writers
References
↑
"
Ispovest
; page 14: "
My family, from my mothers side, hail from central Serbia, around Kragujevac, and are all Orthodox Christians. Fathers family is made up of Muslims from south Serbia.
""
(PDF)
. Marija Šerifović. 2014
. Retrieved
4 January
2015
.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to
List of Bosniak musicians
.
v
t
e
Musicians by country
Albania
Algeria
Angola
Argentina
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bangladesh
Belarus
Belgium
Brazil
Bulgaria
Burundi
Canada
Cameroon
China
Colombia
Denmark
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Ecuador
Egypt
Ethiopia
Finland
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Iceland
Iran
Israel
Japan
Kenya
Liberia
Madagascar
Mauritius
Mexico
Morocco
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
North Korea
Pakistan
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Serbia
Seychelles
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Tajikistan
Uganda
Ukraine
United Kingdom
England
Scotland
Wales
Uruguay
Zambia
Zimbabwe
This page is based on this
Wikipedia article
Text is available under the
CC BY-SA 4.0
license; additional terms may apply.
Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.