Boye (band)

[2] During the year, they held a number of performances in Novi Sad and Belgrade clubs together with the bands Obojeni Program, Grad and Luna, attracting the attention of the Yugoslav music press.

[1] In 1985, the band made demo recordings with the Disciplina Kičme frontman Dušan Kojić "Koja" as the producer, presenting themselves with a more guitar-driven sound.

[4] The recorded demo tracks provided Boye with an opportunity to release the 7-inch single with the songs "Ja hoću te" ("I Want You"), and "Kralj dosade" ("King of Boredom") through Belgrade-based PGP RTB.

[5] The cover of the single was designed by Biljana Babić and featured the inscriptions "Prvi pravi ženski zvuk" ("The first true feminine sound") in Kojić's already familiar manner.

[4] After the release of the single, Boye's new bass guitarist became Darko Matić, the first male member of the band, and the group was joined by yet another singer, Tanja Milović.

[1] The album featured the material written during the previous years, with the prominent songs "Mama Kivi" ("Mother Kiwi"), "Gde se možemo sresti" ("Where Could We Meet") and the title track.

[4] With the outbreak of the wars, Tanja Đajić, Jasna Manjulov and Vesna Branković left the band, quitting their musical careers.

[6] Biljana Babić and Ilija Vlaisavljević continued to lead Boye featuring new members Jelena Kajtez (vocals) and Aleksandra Blažić "Caka" (vocals) and Vladimir Radusinović "Radule" (guitar), the member of the Novi Sad punk rock band Atheist Rap, who had left Boye after a short period of time.

[6] The new lineup appeared on the Ne računajte na nas (Do Not Count On Us) antiwar concert held at the Belgrade Republic Square during the spring of 1992.

[6] The new lineup performed in March 1996 at the Balkans Art Festival in Komotini and Xanthi situated in Greece, near the Turkish border.

[6] The album featured the single "Ludilo mašina" ("Machine Madness"), presenting the band in a more modern musical direction than on the previous releases.

[9] In the summer of 2000 they performed on the concerts organized by Radio B92, alongside Darkwood Dub, Obojeni Program and Voodoo Popeye.

[9] After leaving Boye, Jasna Manjulov published two books of poetry, Različite pesme (Different Songs, 1988) and Lažno predstavljanje (Misrepresentation, 1996) and worked as a proofreader.

[6] In 2023, the album Boye se ne boje was reissued on vinyl with two previously unreleased songs as bonus tracks, "Kuća i krik" ("The House and the Scream") and "Ti si taj" ("You're the One").

[10] In 2009, the Serbian alternative rock band Obojeni Program covered the song "Ja hoću te" and released it on 7-inch single.

[11] During the same year, the Serbian indie rock band Autopark covered the song "Gde možemo se sresti" ("Where We Could Meet") on their album Sve dalje (Further On).

The list was published in the book Kako (ni)je propao rokenrol u Srbiji (How Rock 'n' Roll in Serbia (Didn't) Came to an End).