Kerber (Serbian Cyrillic: Кербер; trans. Cerberus) is a Serbian and former Yugoslav hard rock band from Niš.
The original members of Kerber were Goran Šepa "Gale" (vocals), Tomislav Nikolić (guitar), Branislav "Bane" Božinović (keyboard), Zoran Stamenković (drums) and Zoran Madić (bass guitar). In 1981, formerly known as Top (trans. Cannon), the band changed its name to Kerber. In November 1981, Kerber had their first official concert in Muzički klub in Niš. During 1982 the band had numerous concerts in Niš and Serbia, while working on the material for their first album. In early spring of 1982, Madić left the band due to his army obligations. He was replaced by former Mama Rock and Plamteće Nebo member Zoran "Sosa" Žikić who had an attractive on-stage performance: he played an axe-shaped guitar and performed fire breathing. In May 1983, Kerber won the first place at Omladinski Festival in Subotica with the song "Mezimac" ("Minion").
Kerber is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Ljubav (trans. Love) is the debut studio album by the Serbian hard rock/heavy metal band Trigger, released in 2007. Ljubav is a concept album, featuring lyrics dealing with dark sides of love.
All songs written by Dušan Svilokos Đurić
Ljubav (English: Love) is the fourth studio album by the Serbian rock band Ekatarina Velika, released in 1987. The new band member, replacing Ivan "Raka" Ranković on drums, was Srđan "Žika" Todorović (ex Radnička kontrola, Bezobrazno zeleno, Disciplina kičme). It was their first album released for the Serbian label PGP RTB, and also the first EKV album produced by the Australian musician Theodore Yanni. The album is considered to be one of the band's best and also one of the best records released in (ex)Yugoslavia.
All music composed by Ekatarina Velika.
Kadź [kat͡ɕ] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Klwów, within Przysucha County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 kilometres (2 mi) south-east of Klwów, 17 km (11 mi) north of Przysucha, and 81 km (50 mi) south of Warsaw.
Coordinates: 51°31′00″N 20°40′00″E / 51.5167°N 20.6667°E / 51.5167; 20.6667
A kadı was an official in the Ottoman Empire. Based on the Islamic concept of a judge (Arabic: قاضي qāḍī), the Ottoman official also had extra duties; they performed local administrative tasks, and they were involved in taxation and conscription. They might even appeal matters of taxation to central authority; around 1718 the kadı of Janjevo complained to Istanbul that the local lord had set the ispence tax at 80 akçes, rather than official rate of 32.
A kadı's territory was called a kadiluk; there could be several kadiluks in a province (sanjak). Each sub-province or kaza, governed by a kaymakam, had a kadı (though not every kadı was assigned to one kaza, and the boundaries would shift over time).