Matija Dedić


Matija Dedić was a Croatian jazz pianist and composer, son of singer-songwriter Arsen Dedić and singer Gabi Novak.

Early life and education

Matija Dedić was born in Zagreb on 2 March 1973, to singer-songwriter Arsen Dedić and singer Gabi Novak. Through his paternal grandfather and maternal grandmother, Matija was of Croatian Serb and German descent, respectively. He completed his secondary music education at the in Zagreb and, from 1991, studied at the University of Music and Performing Arts Graz, under Harald Neuwirth.

Career

Following his graduation in 1997, he returned to Zagreb to begin his professional career. Around this time he had been performing with the Boilers quartet, alongside trumpeter Davor Križić, bassist, and drummer. Their four albums, released between 1997 and 2003, include some compositions by Dedić. In the late 1990s, he founded the Matija Dedić Trio. The band, which drew musicians from Obrovac quartet, namely bassist and Krunoslav Levačić, performed in several European countries and the United States. During this period, Dedić collaborated with various jazz musicians, composed music for television and theatre, and worked with Croatian pop artists.
As a solo artist, Dedić released his debut album, Solo Part 1, in 2000. The following year, he issued Handwriting, an album that received three Porin awards in 2002. In 2004, Dallas Records released Tempera, which featured his interpretations of songs by Gibonni. The subsequent year, the same label issued Drugi pogled, a collection dedicated to the repertoire of his father, Arsen Dedić. In 2006, he collaborated with Belgian double bassist on Visiting Bruxelles, and in 2008, he produced Life of Flowers, an album encompassing both his original compositions and works by Dora Pejačević. In 2011, Dedić released MD in NYC, which combined original material with renditions of selections by artists including Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Sting, and Beyoncé in a traditional jazz style.
Over the span of his career he was awarded the Porin on 38 occasions in various categories. He died on 8 June 2025, at the age of 52.

General

*