The band was formed in 1979 and had their first public appearance on November 29 (celebrated in SFR Yugoslavia as the Republic Day), at a punk costume party held at the Pinki club in Zemun.
[1] At the time, the band had four vocalists and no regular lineup, but as time passed, a steady lineup was formed featuring Đorđe Dragojlović (vocals), Časlav Stanković (guitar), Srđan Đurić (bass guitar), Aleksandar Rodić (keyboards, formerly of the bands Kako and Piloti) and Milan Bubalo (drums, formerly of Beograd).
[5] After the album release, the band ended their activity, and vocalist Đorđe Dragojlović started a short-lasting solo career under the alias Super Đoka.
The operette was composed by Vladimir Milačić, directed by Milutin Petrović and featured, beside Dragojlović, Massimo Savić, Dejan Cukić, Snežana Jandrlić, Bora Đorđević, Goran Čavajda "Čavke", Zana Nimani, and Amila Sulejmanović.
[1] The album also featured cover versions of Herbie Hancock's "Cantaloupe Island", entitled "Šta bi dao bre" ("What Would I Give, Bre"), Brian Eno and John Cale's "Empty Frame", entitled "Dragan, Marko i Violeta" ("Dragan, Marko and Violeta") and Pro Arte's "Lola".
[4] During 1995, Dragojlović appeared as guest on the cover version of "Šizika", recorded by the pop rock band Ruž on their album Kao nekada... (Like It Used to Be...).
[4] In 2011, at the Belgrade Mixer festival, the Serbian post-rock band Petrol performed the album Muzika za mlade in its entirety.
[4] In 1998, the various artists compilation Ventilator 202 Demo Top 10, featuring the demo version of the band's song "Možda, možda", appeared on the 100th place on the 100 Greatest Yugoslav Popular Music Albums list, released in the book YU 100: najbolji albumi jugoslovenske rok i pop muzike (YU 100: The Best albums of Yugoslav pop and rock music).