Daltoni (Serbian Cyrillic: ; translation: The Daltons) were a Yugoslav rock band formed in Nià ¡ in 1963, notable as one of the pioneers of the Yugoslav rock scene.
Formed by high school students, Daltoni initially performed beat music, becoming one of the most popular Yugoslav bands in mid-1960s. They released their only studio release, the EP Ruka od sna, in 1968, with the title track becoming a nationwide hit. At the end of the 1960s the band moved towards more contemporary sound, but failed to sustain their popularity, disbanding in 1971.
The band was formed in August 1963 by Branislav Cvetkovià(who at first took up guitar, but soon switched to bass guitar) à ½arko Stankovià(guitar), Rista Trajkovià(rhythm guitar), and Nebojà ¡a "Kenedi" Stojanovià(drums). At the time of the formation, all of the members were sixteen years old. For their first public appearance, at the Gimnazijada festival in Skopje, the band was joined by vocalist Miodrag Raà ¡iÃÂ. At first the band performed mostly cover versions of The Shadows' songs. Daltoni had their first live appearance in their home city in 1965, at the club Index. The band would continue to perform regularly in the club, where vocal duties were occasionally given to Duà ¡an "ÃÂapa" Mitroviàand Mià ¡a "à  olja" Taà ¡iÃÂ, and Mihajlo "Mika" Paligoriàwas temporarily the band's drummer. Soon, the band hired a keyboardist, Miodrag "Mià ¡ko" StojanoviÃÂ.
In 1966, Raà ¡iàleft the band; he died several years later in a car accident. He was replaced by Goce Nikolovski from the rival group Rubinsi (The Rubies). The new lineup presented themselves for the first time at the Nià ¡ Faculty of Technical Science on 29 November 1966, and soon gained the status of a live attraction. In April 1967 they entered the finals of Zagreb Festival of Vocal-Instrumental Ensembles, and in September of the same year they won the first place at the first Nià ¡ Gitarijada festival. On 30 October, the band organized their first solo concert in Belgrade, at Belgrade Youth Center. In the first part of the concert they performed cover versions of The Beatles' songs, including most of the tracks from the album Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, and in the second half they played their own songs.
By the end of 1967, the band had already changed the lineup with Trajkoviàand Cvetkoviàbeing replaced by à ½arko "Baja" Bajagià(bass guitar) and Dragan "Nune" Nikolià(rhythm guitar), both former members of Rubinsi. Their transfer from Rubinsi led to a physical fight between the members of two bands, Bajagiàending up with a broken jaw. The following year, Daltoni performed at the Skopje Fair and prepared their debut EP (Dream Hand), released by Jugoton record label. The EP was the first record released by a rock group from Nià ¡. It featured four tracks: "" ("Friday"), "" ("I Think about the Past Sometimes"), "" ("I Love Our Truth") and the title track, which became a hit on Yugoslav radio stations. Having released the EP, the band went on a tour across SR Serbia, performing first in Nià ¡, in December 1968, at the Park cinema, and a few days later, on 25 December, at the Golden Guitar festival held at Belgrade Fair Hall 8, ending up at the fourth place. At this performance, keyboardist Rade Radivojeviàperformed with the band for the first time.
During the summer of the following year, the band went on an Adriatic seaside resort tour, including the MOC festival in BeÃÂiÃÂi. On their return, they held a concert at the Nià ¡ JNA Hall, and on 8 March 1970, the band organized a marathon concert in Nià ¡'s Sokolana hall, on which they performed for twenty-eight hours, thus beating the record held by the Sarajevo band ÃÂiÃÂak, which had held a 26-hour concert. During the concert Daltoni performed over three hundred songs. This event attracted some attention from the foreign press.
During the same year, the band chose Belgrade as their new career base and in May performed at the Belgrade Spring pop festival. With the new keyboardist Josip Kolbert, the band held regular performances at the Euridika club, the Belgrade Youth Center, and in front of JNA Stadium northern entrance, expanding their repertoire with the up-to-date hits, thus changing their musical style. At the time, the majority of the band's performances were covers of songs by acts such as Jethro Tull, Family, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Sly and the Family Stone and Blodwyn Pig. In the summer of 1970, Radivojeviàreturned to the band, and drummer Stojanoviàwent to serve the army, being replaced by Mika PaligoriÃÂ. This lineup often performed at the Nià ¡ Faculty of Civil Engineering and prepared new songs, which were recorded at the studio of Radio Nià ¡, but the material was not released. In the meantime, in May, the band went on a tour across Istria, returning to Nià ¡ in October 1971, when they officially disbanded. During the 1970s, some of the band members held occasional club performances under the name Daltoni.
After Daltoni disbanded, à ½arko Stankoviàperformed in West German clubs. Upon his return to Yugoslavia, he joined the group Nova Dimenzija (New Dimension), which performed as a backing band for Yugoslav pop singers on their Soviet Union tours. During the 1980s, he led Nià ¡-based band Dan po Dan (Day by Day), and in the late 1980s played with the band Frenky. In 1998, he released the solo album IzmeÃÂu dva vremena (Between Two Ages), with his ethnic music-inspired guitar instrumentals. The recording of his concert held in Nià ¡ National Theatre on 10 December 1998 was released on the 1999 live album Srbija izmeÃÂu dva vremena (Serbia Between Two Ages). With his à ½ar Band (Ember Band) he recorded the albums Live at Jazz Pub Orbit (2000), à ½ar Band (2001) and Oganj gori (The Fire Is Burning, 2006), the latter featuring mostly covers of traditional songs.
Rade RadivojeviÃÂ continued his career as a composer of pop, folk, instrumental, children's, theatre and film music, his compositions appearing on more that 500 releases.
After Daltoni split up, Goce Nikolovski started a career in pop music. He committed suicide on 16 December 2001.
In 1994, the band reunited to perform, alongside Dejan CukiÃÂ, YU Grupa, Generacija 5, Bjesovi, Galija, Ekatarina Velika, Partibrejkers, ElektriÃÂni Orgazam, Van Gogh, Leb i Sol, Kerber, Zabranjeno Puà ¡enje, Riblja ÃÂorba, Toni Montano, Rambo Amadeus, Babe, and others, on (Rock 'n' Roll Forever) concert held at Belgrade Fair â Hall 1.
In 1999, the unreleased recorded material, along with a part of Faculty of Civil Engineering performance and the songs from their only EP, was released on the compilation Anthology. In 2005, the song "" appeared on the box set (1956âÂÂ1970) (When Rock Was Young â East Side Stories (1956âÂÂ1970)), released by Croatia Records in 2005 and featuring songs by the pioneering Yugoslav rock acts.
In June 2016 the band reunited to perform on the concert which was a part of (Rock Museum Live) exhibit in Nià ¡.