The debut album, released without much commercial ambition, consisted of the material recorded as a soundtrack for the Smešna strana muzike (A Funny Side of Music) theatre play.
Most of the tracks on the album were witty cover versions of either rock hits, including the Deep Purple song "Smoke on the Water", featuring the lyrics from the children poem "Leptiriću šareniću" written by Jovan Jovanović Zmaj, "Raw Hide", renamed to "Gipsy Hide", or their interpretations of children songs, including "Ocka" and "Kad si srećan".
The second studio album, Open de dor (transliteration for Open the Door) presented the band in a more serious manner, but nonetheless featured a pornographic parody of the ABBA track "Chiquitita", a cover of the Miroslav Ilić hit "Ja zavoleh devojku iz grada", with lyrics in English language entitled "I Was Born", and a cover of "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" from the Cabaret movie soundtrack, with lyrics in Serbian entitled "Budućnost je samo za nas".
The album also featured a cover of the blues standard "Fever" with lyrics in Serbian renamed to "Zima", which became a nationwide hit, and the a cappella version of the Bijelo Dugme song "Ne spavaj mala moja muzika dok svira", for which the lead vocals were provided by Bogdan Diklić, recorded to resemble the version Diklić had sung in the 1979 film Nacionalna klasa.
On November 30, 1999, the percussionist Tibor Tot died in a car accident and the band ceased to exist.