Baby Lasagna
After two years of meteoric rise – from his breakthrough at Eurovision to global viral success, his debut album Dmns&Mosquitoes, and a sold-out European tour – Baby Lasagna decided to take a step back instead of escalating his success further. The new era is not a celebration of hype, but a reaction to it. Instead of spectacle, he dismantles his own image.
This transformation is ushered in by the single End The Party – the most introspective and sonically intense material of his career to date. The return to the alternative and metal roots that shaped his musical identity from his school days is not just a change of style, but a personal confrontation. The song acts as a public warning to himself.
In the lyrics, Marko openly reflects on his deteriorating mental state and questions his relationship to success, materialism, and his own ego. End The Party reveals fears of turning into what he once mocked – megalomania, superficiality, and hedonism.
The music video, once again directed by his wife Elizabeta, is the most ambitious production of his career to date – and also the last in such a large format. Members of official fan clubs also appear in it, symbolically blurring the line between performer and audience. Like the song itself, it balances between self-irony and confession.
After the genre-spanning album Dmns&Mosquitoes, a clear decision has been made: a return to the identity of "weird kids in black." The humor and irony remain, but the emphasis shifts to a harder sound and sharper self-reflection – similar to earlier singles such as Don’t Hate Yourself But Don’t Love Yourself Too Much, IG Boy, and Bigge Boom Boom.
END THE PARTY TOUR promises an intense concert experience that goes beneath the surface and shows Baby Lasagna without embellishment.
Presale start on March 6 at 10:00 a.m.
Live Nation