Edin Dervišhalidović (born 12 September 1962), known professionally asDino Merlin, is a Bosniansinger-songwriter andrecord producer.[1][2] Nicknamed "The Wizard" (Bosnian:Čarobnjak), he is widely regarded as one of the most prominent and commercially successful artists to have emerged from theformer Yugoslavia.[3]
Dervišhalidović enrolled at Sarajevo Technical High School. During after-school hours, he performed in a music duo with his childhood friend andkeyboardist Mensur Lutvica, with whom he later established the band Merlin.
Although Dervišhalidović's mother was against the idea of her son being a musician, she helped him buy his first guitar when he was 12 years old.[11] He penned his first song at 14 years old. Dervišhalidović was mostly self-taught, although he did take a few lessons from an older neighbor named Mirsad. Mirsad's younger brother, Mensur Lutvica, played the keyboard and attended the same school as Dervišhalidović. They soon became friends and eventually became the founding members of the later band 'Merlin'. Lutvica began accompanying Dervišhalidović while performing on the streets of Sarajevo.
Dervišhalidović was heavily influenced by the Yugoslavian musiciansBijelo Dugme,Zdravko Čolić,Kemal Monteno, andToma Zdravković, among others.[12] He entered several music competitions covering their songs. He later became close friends withGoran Bregović, the founder and primary songwriter of Bijelo Dugme.
After enrolling in university, Dervišhalidović formed a band with Lutvica on keyboard, Amir "Tula" Bjelanović on guitar, Džafer Saračević on drums, and Enver Milišić on bass guitar. Each of the five put a paper with their idea for a band name in a hat; the name "Merlin" was pulled and chosen as the name of the band.[13]
After completing his first semester at university, Dervišhalidović dropped out to pursue a music career. However, he did not have enough money to rent a recording studio. During this time, he married his girlfriend Amela and worked two shifts a day at a metal factory in the suburbs of Sarajevo for a few years.[14] It was during this time that he started writing most of the songs which would later appear on his first album.
In 1984, Dervišhalidović rented a local studio inSarajevo owned by producerBrano Likić. Dervišhalidović wrote all the recorded songs and paid the recording fees from his funds. He was rejected by every major record label in Sarajevo. At the same time, Dervišhalidović's private funds were only enough for 6 songs. During the recording session for the final song, a localA&R agent named Muradif Brkić entered the studio where Dervišhalidović and Likić were mixing a song. After listening to the track, "Kokuzna Vremena", a couple of times, Brkić offered Dervišhalidović a contract with his record labelSarajevo Disk and agreed to finance the remainder of the song recordings. Merlin eventually released their first album in 1985 titledKokuzna vremena.[15] With the band, Dervišhalidović has recorded 5 studio albums:Kokuzna vremena in 1985,Teško meni sa tobomin 1986,Merlin in 1987,Nešto lijepo treba da se desi in 1989, andPeta strana svijeta in 1990.
During theBosnian War, several members of Merlin were killed, including their long-time manager Kemal Bisić, with whom Dino was close.[16]
Not long after the band dissolved, Dino was invited by theBosnian state government to write the country's first-ever national anthem "Jedna si jedina". The song acted as the state's national anthem until the late 1990s.[17] In 1993, he wrote the song "Sva bol svijeta" ("All the grief in the world") for and eventually participated in Bosnia's firstEurovision Song Contest inMillstreet in 1993.[18] The song is about the hardships Bosnians endured during the war and calls for peace. He again participated in the Eurovision Song Contests in Jerusalem in1999 (singing "Putnici" withBéatrice Poulot, a French singer) and in2011 with "Love in Rewind".[18] Dervišhalidović has also taken part in other big European festivals, such as the Copenhagen festival in 1996 and theTurkovision Song Contest in 1997.[19]
In 2000, Dino released his most successful album to date -Sredinom ("Through the Middle"). The album was a top-selling album in Bosnia and Herzegovina and was sold in all of the formerYugoslav republics.[20]
The album became a classic and was the highest-selling album in the region in 30 years. Some estimates put the album sales at about 2,000,000.[21]
The subsequent tour promotingSredinom included over 200 concerts with a performance at theKoševo City Stadium inSarajevo in front of an audience of about 80,000. This was the largest crowd ever to assemble in the national stadium in Bosnia's history.[21] Dervišhalidović subsequently performed three more times at this stadium and is the only artist ever to have filled this venue on four occasions.
After a six-year hiatus, Dino returned to the stage with his eleventh albumHotel Nacional.[22] It was released in June 2014 and was featured in the top 10 on theBillboard World Albums list upon release due to unprecedented online sales in the region.[23][24] This is the only album fromSlavic-speaking Europe ever to chart on Billboard. The album featuredYoad Nevo,Richard Niles,Hüsnü Şenlendirici, and others.[22] 900,000 people attended The Hotel National World Tour across 4 continents. It is the largest tour ever to have been produced by an artist from Southeast Europe.[25]
Dino released his song "Mi" in October 2020, followed by "Dođi" at the start of 2021, and two more songs ("Mir svim dobrim ljudima" and "Jedan dan, jedna noć") in May.[26]
Dino resides in his hometown ofSarajevo, in the same house and street where he was born and raised, in the neighborhood ofAlifakovac. He has two children, Naida[27] and Hamza.[28]
Dino is an avid chess player, skier, art collector, and reader. He also owns a record label and store, Magaza, in the center of Sarajevo, inBaščaršija.
Dino is an active donor to scholarships for underprivileged children in Bosnia and Herzegovina. He is a long-time member of the Hastor Foundation, the biggest organization devoted to distributing scholarships to students in the country. He sponsors over a dozen students each year and has been a member of this program since 2008.[29]
Dino worked for five yearspro bono as the honorary andde facto president of the assembly of AMUS, the main association of music artists of Bosnia and Herzegovina.[30] He was one of the founding members of the organization in 2013.[31] In early 2018, he resigned from his position due to the lack of time to do the work.[30]
Dino has played numerous charity concerts. During the2014 Southeast Europe floods, his team was heavily involved in humanitarian work, distributing water, food, blankets and other provisions to the most endangered parts of Bosnia andSerbia.[32][33]
In 2013, Dino was awarded the International Humanitarian Award inUrfa, Turkey.[34]