VIA Talas (; trans. VIE The Wave) was a former Yugoslav new wave band, notable as one of the participants of the ArtistiÃÂka radna akcija project. The band name featured the prefix VIA added to the former Yugoslav 1960s rock bands, which stands for 'vokalno-instrumentalni ansambl' ('vocal-instrumental ensemble').
The band was formed in the early 1980s by former BG 5 member Bojan PeÃÂar (vocals, bass, guitar, synthesizer, percussion), Mira Mijatovià(the daughter of the Yugoslav politician Cvijetin MijatoviÃÂ, vocals), Duà ¡an Gerzià"Gera" (saxophone, drums) and Mià ¡ko Petrovià"Plavi" (bass, guitar, backing vocals). The band participated the ArtistiÃÂka radna akcija (Artistic Work Action) various artists compilation, featuring the second generation of Belgrade new wave and punk rock bands, with two songs, "Hawai (najljepà ¡i kraj)" ("Hawai (The Most Beautiful Place)") and "Lilihip (My Boy Lollipop)", the later being a cover version of a Millie Small song "My Boy Lollipop". The band also performed as an opening act for Idoli at their first concert.
By the time the band had released their debut album Perfektan dan za banana ribe (A perfect day for bananafish), in 1983, under the name Talas, which got the title by the J. D. Salinger's short-story "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", PeÃÂar and Mijatoviàwere the only band members. The album featured eight songs, and the album's opening track "Sama" ("Alone") became a nationwide hit and appeared on the Svetislav "Bata" PreliÃÂ's à  eÃÂerna vodica movie soundtrack. The album, recorded at the Belgrade MS studio, was produced by PeÃÂar and Boban Petroviàand released through Sarajevo Disk in 3000 copies only. As guests on the album appeared Milan "MiÃÂa" Bubalo (drum machine), Ivan Vdovià"Vd" (drums), Milan Mladenovià(guitar) and Vuk VujaÃÂià(saxophone).
The band's song "Ti" appeared on the Ventilator 202 - Demo top 10 compilation album but, soon after, the band ceased to exist.
Mira MijatoviÃÂ died of a drug overdose.
GerziÃÂ worked as a designer and graphic artist and collaborated with Yugoslav new wave bands like Haustor, ElektriÃÂni orgazam, Idoli, D' Boys and Ekatarina Velika. In 1986, he finished the Applied Arts studies in Belgrade and held numerous exhibitions in SFR Yugoslavia and abroad. He worked in Paris, New York City, Toronto, and, in 1997, he returned to Belgrade where he died the following year.
Bojan PeÃÂar joined Katarina II, which, after the release of their self titled album, was renamed to Ekatarina Velika, with whom he released four more studio and one live album. In early 1990 he left the band and moved to London and played in a band called Mission. He also wrote poetry and was a painter. On October 16, 1998, PeÃÂar died of a heart attack in London.
The only surviving member of the band is PetroviÃÂ. He joined D' Boys as guitarist and bass guitarist, until 1986, when he joined Piloti. In 1990 he joined Ekatarina Velika and released the song "Zvezde" on the compilation S' one strane duge. He also started playing accordion and worked on several movie soundtracks and solo projects, and, in 2003, he formed the Mià ¡ko Plavi Band with musicians from Serbia, India, United Kingdom and Israel. He also participated in the Kao da je bilo nekad... PosveÃÂeno Milanu MladenoviÃÂu tribute to Milan Mladenoviàand, with Mià ¡ko Plavi Band, released two studio albums and a live album. He is the member of the Société des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs de musique and Association of Composers of Serbia and the owner of two golden and one platinum record.
In 2005, "Ti" was reissued on a PGP-RTS compilation Specijal 2: Dan zaljubljenih
In October 2020, âÂÂPerfektan Dan Za Banana Ribeâ was reissued.
In 1998, the various artists compilation Ventilator 202 vol. 1, featuring the band's song "Ti", appeared on the 100th place on the 100 greatest Yugoslav popular music albums list, released in the book ' (YU 100: The Best albums of Yugoslav pop and rock music).
In 2006, the song "Sama" was ranked No. 65 on the B92 Top 100 Domestic Songs list.