The Truth) is the sixth studio album released by Serbian and former Yugoslav rock band Riblja Čorba.
The track "Disko mišić" featured Goran Bregović, leader of Riblja Čorba's main competitors at the time, Bijelo Dugme, on vocals (Đorđević previously made a guest appearance on Bijelo Dugme's 1984 self-titled album, singing with Bregović and Tifa in the song "Pediculis Pubis").
The album is perhaps most memorable for its apocalyptic track "Pogledaj dom svoj, anđele" (named after, but not inspired by the novel Look Homeward, Angel by Thomas Wolfe) which went on to become one of Riblja Čorba's signature pieces.
[8] Istina was described by Serbian critic Petar Janjatović as "the first real comeback album in the history of Yugoslav rock".
It would become a political ideology, a soundtrack for pathos which announces the final clash, and the borders between rock 'n' roll provocation and reality, between Bora and the audience would be frozen and erased forever".