Blažević often performed striptease on stage and communicated with the members of the audience, and the band soon became one of Belgrade's most popular club bands, so they self-released the recording of their concert in Klub Studenata Tehnike held on April 14, 1994, on the audio cassette Igra rokenrol SR Jugoslavija (FR Yugoslavia Is Dancing to Rock and Roll, referring to Električni Orgazam hit "Igra rock 'n' roll cela Jugoslavija").
The album featured covers of songs by Azra, Zabranjeno Pušenje, Riblja Čorba, Prljavo Kazalište, Bijelo Dugme, Plavi Orkestar, but also by Blažević's former band Fiskulturno Lane.
[citation needed] During the same year, on May 25, Blažević organized a Youth Day celebration at the club Prostor which featured all the elements of rock culture from the socialist times.
In October 1996, the band released their first studio album entitled Plagijati i obrade (Plagiarism and Covers) which featured covers of Jadranka Stojaković's "Čekala sam", Elvis J Kurtović's "Da bog da crk'o rokenrol (kad ga svako svira)", Mile Lojpur's "Šumadijski tvist", the former featuring Lojpur on vocals.
[1] Plagijati i obrade also featured singer Marija Mihajlović and the members of Irish folk/Celtic rock band Orthodox Celts as guest musicians.
Blažević decided to name the album Seks, droga i Bodiroga, having seen this written as a graffiti, after FR Yugoslavia won the gold medal at the 1998 FIBA World Championship.
The album featured guest appearances by YU grupa member Dragi Jelić, on vocals in "To je samo rock 'n' roll", and Eyesburn members Aleksandar Petrović "Alek", flute on "Zvuci rodnog kraja" and tambourine on "Sunce tuđeg neba (ne greje k'o naše)", and Hornsman Coyote, trombone on "Anna Kournikova".