Bulgarian punk rock & ska group Hipodil composed a song, Bate Goiko, dedicated to Gojko Mitić.
The album's opening track, song about Gojko Mitić, "Bate Gojko" (Big Brother Gojko)rocketed to the top of Bulgarian airplay charts and was among the few Hipodil songs to have a video clip.
In 1991, he joined the then-fledgling punk rock band Hipodil to replace its previous singer, Miroslav Tellalov, who left the band to serve in the Bulgarian army.
Hipodil |
Though quite diverse, the music of the album was tightly connected to other acts' influences on Hipodil band members with Slayer and Judas Priest being the most prominent among them.
Of course, the album has enough songs of Hipodil's trademark party-oriented, sex & alcohol-based lyrics and a lot of mockeries, especially with the gay society in "Jenite sa za pederasi" (Women Are for Gays) and with the then-popular Bulgarian pop duet Doni & Momchil in "Moni i Domchil" (the song begins with a Slayer riff after the intro part, which is a parody of a song by Doni & Momchil).