[1] The band worked in an unsteady lineup, but managed to gain attention of the media with their first demo recording, the song "Noću haramo" ("We Raven at Night").
[1] Soon after the formation, the band was joined by Đurić's friend Milutin Petrović, who graduated film and television directing on the Belgrade Faculty of Dramatic Arts.
[1] In 1987 Heroji recorded their second 7-inch single, featuring the songs "Kiza rock" and "E = mc²", stylistically similar to their debut release.
[1] The album brought campy songs, with tracks "Zgromiću te ja" ("I Will Crush You"), "Gagarin", "Nikad robom" ("Never a Slave") and "Majmun" ("Monkey") seeing the biggest airplay.
[1] He returned to music in 1993, when he released the album Maštarije (Fictions, named after Jorge Luis Borges' collection of stories).
[1] The material for the album was originally written for Đurić's radio drama Balada o unutrašnjem moru (The Ballad of the Inner Sea).
He recorded the album in cooperation with keyboardist Milan Milosavljević, guitarist Zoran Anić and producer Aleksandar Janković.
[1] In 2014 Đura i Mornari released the album Algeria, in the lineup featuring, beside Vladimir Đurić, Radivoje "Rale" Bojanovski (guitar), Dejan "Deki" Resanović (bass guitar, accordion), Milan Milosavljević "Burda" (keyboards), Nikola Đokić (drums) and Boris Đurić (accordion).
The song "Tekila Meksiko" ("Tequila Mexico") featured singer Prljavi Inspektor Blaža on vocals as guest.
[1] From 1992 to 1994 he hosted the shows Kurs kreativnog pisanja (Creative Writing Course) and Đurina treš lista (Đura's Trash List).
[1] With journalist Goran Tarlać he co-authored Pesme iz stomaka naroda – Antologija turbo folka (Songs from the Belly of the People – The Anthology of Turbo-folk).
[4] In 1988 he directed the TV adaptation of the rock opera Kreatori i kreature (Creators and Creatures), written by Vladimir Milačić[1] and starring Yugoslav musicians Snežana Jandrlić, Dejan Cukić, Massimo Savić, Zana Nimani, Bora Đorđević, Amila Sulejmanović and Goran Čavajda "Čavke".
[1] In 1992 he directed the hit musical Trinidad, played in Bitef Theatre and based on Robert Mitchum's album Calypso – Is like So….
[1] The songs from the musical were released on the 1994 album The Trinidad, the recording of which featured Miša Savić and the members of the band Vera Kvark.
[1] He cooperated with alternative rock musician Rambo Amadeus on the musical pieces performed in Sava Centar on 27 December 1994, during the screening of Fritz Lang's film Metropolis.