Indira Radić was born as Indira Subotić to Bosnian Serb parents Živko Subotić and Rosa in the village of Dragalovci near the Bosnian town of Doboj. She was named after the Indian Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi. Her parents from an early stage noticed her talent for singing, so from a young age Indira took part in many music competitions. After finishing primary school, she enrolled in a medical school in Doboj before working as a nurse for three years in the Mladen Stojanović Hospital in Zagreb. However, she found that her greatest love is music.
Career
1992–98
In Yugoslavia, there was an organised contest for amateur singers, the final being held in Sarajevo. Radić entered the contest and was expected to win, but the final was cancelled as it coincided with the start of the Bosnian War in springtime 1992. A few months later, Radić contacted the record labelDiskos and recorded her first album Nagrada i kazna with the bandJužni Vetar. After the release of her first album, she moved to Belgrade with her family to build a career. She recorded two more albums with Južni Vetar, Zbog tebe and Ugasi me, before releasing her first solo album Idi iz života mogaon the record label PGP-RTS. In 1996, Radić began her three-year stint at ZaM production during which she recorded three albums. First of these was Krug, which elevated her image. It was followed by Izdajnik and award-winning Voliš li me ti, which provided Radić with many successful performances and tours.
2000–09
In 2000, Radić started working for Grand Production, releasing the albumMilenijum that same year and Gde ćemo večeras in 2001. A milestone of Radić’s career was when she recorded the duet Lopov with Alen Islamović, a singer of the Yugoslav rock bandBijelo dugme; the duet was composed and produced by Goran Ratković-Rale for her 2002 album Pocrnela burma The duet, which incorporated a new music genre called "pop-folk", a mix of folk melodies and western pop music, has achieved great success. In 2003, Radić released the album Zmaj. It included the songs Moj živote dal si živ, Tika-tak, Bio si mi drag and Pedeset godina and the title track, among others. The album received numerous awards among which was an Album of the Year, The Hits and Album of the Decade, and Top-selling Album. Her songs from Zmaj were translated into Bulgarian, Romanian, Greek, Albanian and Romani. In the successor states of Yugoslavia, Radić became initially successful in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Macedonia and Montenegro. Radić then went on a Balkan tour. On 27 April 2004 she held her first, and at that time, the most successful concert in show business in "Sports Hall" in Belgrade. She was given an award in Bulgaria for being the "most popular and best singer in the Balkans" in 2005. Between 2004 and 2006, Radić had a successful tour and in 2006 received the award for the largest number of concerts held. Radić released the album Ljubav kad prestane, featuring the hit songs April, Deset devet tri dva jedan and the title track. It was followed in 2007 by Lepo se provedi with the hit songImali smo, nismo znali In 2008, the controversial single Pije mi se, off the album Heroji, included a music video in which two men were shown kissing. On that same album she sang a duet entitled Hajde sestro with singer Ksenija Pajčin. In October that year, she sang the song Ako umrem sad and in December 2008 she released the full album Heroji. In addition, Indira was declared the Serbian gay icon of 2008. In 2009, she received an award for Singer of the Year. In mid-2009, Radić recorded the duet Možda baš ti with Ivan Plavšić. The duet's entire proceeds went to charity, and consequently she won the Big Heart Award from Put humanizma and the Princess Katherine Karađorđević Fund. In October 2009, Radić promoted two singles Pusti me and Živim da živim
2010–''present''
In December 2011, Indira released her jubilee fifteenth album entitled Istok, sever, jug i zapad. The album included 17 new songs including Marija, which Indira sung in French in a duet with a colleague Stanko Marinković. The song was parodied heavily because of Radić’s horrible French, collecting over 100,000 views on YouTube within the first 24 hours of its release and after a week got seventh place of most commented YouTube videos worldwide.