Filip Mitrovic (born October 31, 1991, Kraljevo) is a Serbian pop singer. Before becoming a singer, he was a pizza master.

Filip Mitrovic
Born (1991-10-31) 31 October 1991 (age 32)
Kraljevo
GenresFolk, pop
Occupation(s)Singer
Years active2011–present
LabelsGrand Production
Websitefilip-mitrovic.com

Debut edit

The public was introduced to Filip through the talent show Prvi glas Srbije (season 1) which was aired on Prva Srpska Televizija where he won the fifth place. A year after the expiry of the contract, he signed a new contract and became part of Grand Production, the largest production company in the Balkan.

Discography edit

For Grand Production he published a song Šta sam ti ja, a duet with a Serbian folk singer Biljana Sečivanović.

A few months later he was invited to participate in a reality show Farma which was broadcast on RTV Pink. In this reality, he stayed 95 days and then he presented his first single Ljubavni parazit which quickly became a hit on TV and radio stations.

Soon he presented the songs:

  • Antidepresiv (2013)
  • Luda Glava (2013)
  • Brojim (2014)
  • Beli grad (2014)
  • Ludo Srce (2015)
  • Zabranjeno moje (2016)
  • Ne pričam nikom o tebi (2017)

In October 2017. Filip released his first album `Virus`.

Filip is collaborating with the best composers and arrangers in Serbia such as Bojan Vasic and Marko Cvetković, who also wrote for some of the biggest Balkan stars such as Saša Matić, Ceca, Aca Lukas and many others.

He is the first Serbian singer who shot music videos on Iceland, which has attracted significant media attention since it is the destination of a few Justin Bieber's videos. His music video Zabranjeno moje won the award for the music video of the year.

References edit

  • "Filip Mitrović snimio nesvakidašnji spot za pesmu "Zabranjeno moje" (video) - svet". www.svet.rs. Retrieved 2016-11-02.
  • Filip Mitrovic iskopirao Justin Bieber-a
  • Filip Mitrovic ulazi na Farmu
  • Filip Mitrovic najavio prvu pesmu
  • Filip Mitrovic dobio nagradu za spot godine Archived 2016-11-04 at the Wayback Machine