Trying to map Rijeka’s punk scene through albums alone is inherently difficult. Like many punk movements, its most vital moments often existed outside the LP format — in EPs, singles, split releases, and chaotic live performances spread through word of mouth and magazines.
Still, this guided listening path through Rijeka’s alternative subculture acts as an accompanying piece to the full guide, Anarchy in the Adriatic: Rijeka’s Punk Scene — tracing the first ruptures of DIY punk in the late 1970s before flowing into post-punk, synth-pop, noise rock, alternative rock, and eventually large-scale art rock.
1. V/A – Riječki Novi Val (Antologija)
Yes — a compilation opens the list, but let me explain… Any attempt to understand Rijeka’s punk scene without acknowledging its collective DIY nature would be dishonest. Much of the city’s most essential punk output never appeared on full-length albums, making an anthology not only defensible but necessary.

2. Paraf – Izleti
Compared to Paraf’s earlier raw recordings, Izleti can feel like the work of a different group altogether. While the debut remains historically crucial for introducing punk to Yugoslavia, Izleti represents something colder, more polished, and more conceptual.

3. Mrtvi Kanal / Grč – Mrtvi Kanal / Grč
Few records capture the noisy tension of Rijeka’s early underground as vividly as this split release. Mrtvi Kanal lean heavily into jagged punk and Novi Val minimalism, while Grč push toward something darker and more confrontational — even if they have not yet fully arrived at their later sound.

4. Let 3 – Two Dogs Fuckin’
An alt-rock masterpiece. Two Dogs Fuckin’ synthesises punk irreverence, industrial abrasion, electronic textures, and surreal provocation into a singular statement.

5. Urban & 4 – Žena dijete
The list closes with Žena dijete, a record that marks the transformation of Rijeka’s punk-derived ethos into fully realised art rock. More expansive, more polished, and more stylistically diverse, it incorporates downtempo, trip hop, hip hop, and electronic influences.

This is just a starting point — the full expanded guide, with deeper context and additional albums, is available on Patreon.

