4:51 music band Czerwone Gitary was the Polish equivalent of The Beatles behind the Iron Curtain . They have a lot of famous hits under their belt. One of the more famous hits is e.g. Nie spoczniemy
5:32 "Trzynastego" means "the thirteenth", words Janusz Kondratowski, music Ryszard Poznakowski 1967. Sung by Katarzyna Sobczyk with the band Czerwono-Czarni
This is Polish soft rock, which in Poland was called bigbit. At the end, you can see Maryla Rodowicz for a moment, who was just as big a star as Czesław Niemen. In Poland at that time, jazz and rock were very popular among young people. The musicians had musical education - today it is different. When you listen to worthless music like Eurovision, you see people who are mostly not from music schools. In this film, almost everyone was in some kind of music school.
@@auburnU2be Pamiętając o tym, że 1 TVP została uruchomiona 18 lat wcześniej, do dzisiejszego dnia - to nie znowu tak wielka różnica 😊. Gdyby nie wojna, Państwowy Instytut Telefonii i Polskiego Radia planował uruchomić jeden program w 1940 roku. Wybuch wojny te plany przekreślił 😞. Pozdrawiam serdecznie 🤗
oh shit, you found a really great compilation! those were the times when artists had both good lyrics and good technique. they were educated musically. Now they are usually just products created by PR
Exactly. Niemen referred to the beginnings of the Polish state with this styling - at that time, in 1966, Poland celebrated the 1000th anniversary of the Polish state (and the adoption of baptism by prince Mieszko The First).
@@supreme3376 To były piekne dni... ludzie jeszcze listy pisali recznie i listonosz je rozwoził do skrzynek pocztowych na rowerze.... a co wiecej, przynosił do domu telegramy i listy polecone... Awizo to była ostateczność.
The best song of Czesław Niemen is Jednego Serca. It is singing by other artists in covers: by Piotr Cugowski, Mateusz Ziółko. You should to listen song: Idą casy za casami" by Skalni, Zaświeć Niesądzu" by Apolonia Nowak, Omnia nuda et Alberta by Stanisław Sojka, Korowód by Grechuta, "Od wschodu do Zachodu Słońca" and "Nie widzę Ciebie w swych marzeniach" by Skaldowie, Osiem błogosławieństw, and Mary Christmas and Happy New Year in Lesser Polish Dialect.
The best for you. I prefer "Dziwny jest ten świat/Strange is this world" i "Sen o Warszawie/A Dream about Warsaw" - also performed later by many other Polish performers
Great array of classics! Enjoyable all the way through :) Please try listening to: Grzegorz Turnau - Cichosza (1993) or Zbigniew Wodecki - Lubię Wracać Tam, Gdzie Byłem (KFPP Opole 1980)
It,s mega good compilation. Even me as a Pole don,t knew all songs. Probably we don’t appreciate what we have, but this songs where inspired by greatest stars those times. Finally I recommend review songs of „2+1” polish music trio if You like ABBA, music like that. Thank You for reaction.
Czesław Niemen's outfit and haircut come from old eastern Poland, which now belongs to Belarus. He was born there. His pseudonym Niemen comes from the name of a river from that region.
Białoruś nigdy nie należała do Polski, nie licząc okresu międzywojennego w XX wieku. To były od Średniowiecza tereny litewskie. Rzeka Niemen zawsze była określana mianem rzeki litewskiej, również przez polskich literatów, takich jak Mickiewicz, Słowacki czy Miłosz. Warto przy okazji dodać, że miasto Suwałki też nigdy przed XX wiekiem nie wchodziło w skład Królestwa Polskiego a także tereny wokół Augustowa. Jeśli chodzi o miasto Białystok, które ma w herbie litewską Pogoń, to znalazło się w granicach Królestwa Polskiego dopiero w 1569 po zawiązaniu Unii Lubelskiej, która stworzyła federacyjne państwo polsko-litewskie z dwiema nominalnymi stolicami: Krakowem (Polska) i Wilnem (Litwa). Nie muszą przypominać, że Wilno nigdy nie znalazło się w granicach Królestwa Polskiego, do końca istnienia federacji pozostało stolicą wielowiekowego sojusznika Polski. Jak później Polska potraktowała swojego wielowiekowego sojusznika, też nie muszę przypominać, wszyscy nasi sąsiedzi wiedzą jak fałszywi, zdradzieccy i zakłamani są Polacy, dlatego na ich wielką sympatię za bardzo liczyć nie możemy, niestety.
@@PiotrJaserna dobrą opinię trzeba pracować latami a stracić w jednej chwili a odpracować bardzo ciężko bo często trzeba zgiąć kark i przeprosić prosić o wybaczenie a to nam Polakom ciężko przychodzi 😢
Rozumiem że szukacie polskiej muzyki z tamtych lat. Tak, to były legendy tamtych czasów. Posłuchajcie może coś z nowszych nagrań, bardzo dla nas ważnych Aranhaja Kult, Jeszcze będzie przepięknie Tilt. Pozdrawiam.
Poland in the 60s was a communist country, where the State controlled everything that was published. In Poland, there were 2 state television channels and 4 state radio channels. Record companies were also state-owned, there were two or three, and the circulation of their records was very limited. Of course, there was also censorship, as in every communist country, which checked the lyrics of EVERY song performed in public. Rock & Roll was considered by the communist authorities to be a product of "rotten Western capitalism" and was barely tolerated, which is why Polish music animators came up with the term "Big Beat" and the slogan "Polish Youth Sings Polish Songs" - only thanks to this could rock and roll music exist in communist Poland, precisely under the slogan "Big Beat" - most of the artists from the above video were classified as this trend. The authorities promoted music referring to Polish folklore, and bands that sounded too rock (read: Western) were harassed and had no chance to appear on TV or radio, it was a miracle when they released an album. There were of course a few exceptions to this rule, but it was until the very end of the 70s, when the rock boom broke out in Poland.
You got carried away by your emotions and as a result you overdid it a bit. This music (rock, blues, jazz) exploded after the end of the Stalinist period in Poland (1947-1956) and no one could stop it (during the Stalinist period such music flourished underground: it literally flourished, at private concerts and meetings). And after 1956 the authorities really had to adapt, because no prohibitions or orders worked (one of many proofs: the cult song of "Czerwone gitary", entitled "Biały krzyż/The White Cross", dedicated to the father of the lead vocalist of this band, who died fighting with the communists after 1945 during the home war in the years 1945-1947). The only thing the communist authorities could do was organize festivals, concerts in cultural centers, control the pay system in the world of culture and thanks to that control it at least a little. The resistance of Poles to communism imposed after 1945 by the USSR and the contempt for communist ideology and cultural policy were too common and strong in society. In the 1960s, Poland became the most liberal, in a political and cultural sense, communist country in Europe and the world (although still, especially in political matters, resolute anti-communism was persecuted, including political assassinations and throwing people out of work). People, at all levels and in all areas of culture, art - simply were themselves and resisted communist censorship. In addition, Western literature was officially published, it was possible to buy Western press, etc., this was a phenomenon in communist countries. Hungarians and Russians learned Polish because in Polish cultural centers in their countries they could keep up to date with what was happening in the world. This is a Polish phenomenon. The same phenomenon was responsible for the fact that only in Poland the communists failed to collectivize agriculture and the farms remained in private hands. But you're right, the 70s were already a mega-boom for rock music, because some systemic limitations disappeared. Previously, rock music was played on the radio and tv, but mainly Polish music, or music from other communist countries, and Western rock music definitely appeared in the media less often (although in Poland everyone listened to it and knew world rock music anyway, and besides, The Rolling Stones concert took place in Warsaw in 1967, and the militia, which wanted to control the audience, turned out to be powerless). In the 70s, on the state radio, a radio show called Radiokurier appeared (which a few years later became program 3 of Polish Radio) - a separate and wildly popular music channel devoted (among others) to Polish and Western rock music, but also jazz, electronic, etc. This was a big change. And in the 1980s the communist authorities no longer had control over anything, especially since they had lost not only to people, but also to technology (they were unable to control the circulation of recordings on cassette tapes independent of state-owned companies or young people at rock festivals).
@@alh6255 Judging from the somewhat propaganda-like eulogy you wrote above, you don't have much of an idea about those times in Poland. "Control" is not the same as "forbid" - the control of the communist state consisted in allowing something, and forbidding or limiting something. The scope of these prohibitions and restrictions decreased with time, but even in the 80s the communist authorities could do quite a lot - the top Polish band Maanam experienced this when they refused to play a concert at the Festival of Soviet Song in Zielona Góra - they were banned from broadcasting their songs on Polish Radio and Television for several months, let me remind you that there were no other stations in Poland at that time. Similarly, the band Lady Pank almost fell apart after in 1986 its leader Jan Borysewicz, very drunk, pulled out his dick during a concert organized by the Union of Socialist Polish Youth. The band suspended its activity for over a year, most of the musicians left, and the author of the lyrics of all the great Lady Pank hits publicly "cut off" Borysewicz, although he had not been bothered by other drunken excesses of the Lady Pank musicians, excesses that are still remembered by the staff of several Polish hotels - for example, the bathtub ride down the stairs of the Hotel Wrocław. After 1989, when communism in Poland ended, the number of anti-communist fighters increased rapidly, but somehow no one except themselves heard about their "fight against communism" - as in the case of the song "Biały krzyż", which for everyone was a song about partisans fighting German Nazis, and today it turns out that the partisans fought communists.
Posłuchajcie tego: "Kolorowe Sny (cover) - Wokaliści Dzikiego Ucha | Dzikie Ucho" (bardziej współczesne), sprawdźcie też nazwisko: Maryla Rodowicz, ciekawe czy rozpoznacie 🙂Ps. Thank you, I'm the next generation and I know most of these songs by heart. They are all about something, they are not modern gibberish.
1) Mówicie o wyglądzie artysty Czesław Niemen => tu jest ten utwór: th-cam.com/video/3aRz0IVMuW8/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=Mindowe 2) A tu późniejszy wygląd i piosenka: th-cam.com/video/dHB2Xk2Mh0w/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ajgie 20 lat różnicy
Mam do was pytanie ? Lubicie ballady i poezję śpiewaną ? Jeśli tak posłuchajcie grupy Stare Dobre Małżeństwo i Cztery Pory Piłowania . Lub Michała Bajora czy Grzegorza Turnaua . Tego chyba jeszcze nie znacie ? Chociaż reagowaliście na Ewę Demarczyk , ale w późniejszych latach też byli piosenkarze i piosenkarki śpiewający podobną muzykę , do dzisiaj tacy są . Jak na przykład Adela Konop . Słuchaliście kiedyś wokalistki z USA Tracy Chapman ? Adela Konop ma podobny wokal , ale śpiewa trochę inaczej . Pozdrawiam , życzę udanych poszukiwań dobrej muzyki .
th-cam.com/video/yQ_s2sdS160/w-d-xo.htmlsi=vWfTlKg8D4EJg4J7 the cover one of this Polish groups SKALDOWIE calls Medytacje wiejskiego listonosza (Meditations of village postman). I love this band
Czesław Niemen - Sen o Warszawie, Jednego serca, Wspomnienie, Pod Papugami Czerwone Gitary - Historia jednej znajomości, Kwiaty we włosach, Wróćmy na jeziora Breakout - Gdybyś kochał hej, Poszłabym za tobą, Na drugim brzegu tęczy, Kiedy byłem małym chłopcem, Modlitwa Maciej Kossowski - Wakacje z blondynką Marek Grechuta - Korowód, Świecie nasz, Ocalić od zapomnienia Maryla Rodowicz - Małgośka
Dzień dobry!
Bardzo dobry dzień.
Mamy kolejny film ❤
4:51 music band Czerwone Gitary was the Polish equivalent of The Beatles behind the Iron Curtain . They have a lot of famous hits under their belt. One of the more famous hits is e.g. Nie spoczniemy
Dzień dobry:)
All of these songs are classics. They were all insanely popular. I was born in the nineties and I know them all.
Proponuję Czesław Niemen-"Największe przeboje"
skoro tak go lubicie,tam znajdziecie najważniejsze jego utwory a każdy to przebój
6.48 😂 Wasza piosenka dla oglądających...GDYBYŚ LUBIŁ MNIE CHOĆ TROCHĘ- HEEEJ.
Zostawił byś CHOĆ ŁAPKĘ- HEEJ.
"Czerwone gitary" to byli tacy polscy The Beatles😂❤
Byli jeszcze np. "Trubadurzy"
5:32 "Trzynastego" means "the thirteenth", words Janusz Kondratowski, music Ryszard Poznakowski 1967. Sung by Katarzyna Sobczyk with the band Czerwono-Czarni
This is Polish soft rock, which in Poland was called bigbit. At the end, you can see Maryla Rodowicz for a moment, who was just as big a star as Czesław Niemen. In Poland at that time, jazz and rock were very popular among young people. The musicians had musical education - today it is different.
When you listen to worthless music like Eurovision, you see people who are mostly not from music schools. In this film, almost everyone was in some kind of music school.
Big beat
big beat
Maryla wasn't
TVP to ogolnopolski, państwowy kanał telewizyjny od zawsze. Pozdrawiam 🥰
In 1960, there was only one TV channel in Poland. Channel two was launched in the fall of 1970.
@@auburnU2be
Pamiętając o tym, że 1 TVP została uruchomiona 18 lat wcześniej, do dzisiejszego dnia - to nie znowu tak wielka różnica 😊. Gdyby nie wojna, Państwowy Instytut Telefonii i Polskiego Radia planował uruchomić jeden program w 1940 roku. Wybuch wojny te plany przekreślił 😞. Pozdrawiam serdecznie 🤗
@@dewajtis64 W latach 30. nadawano już w Warszawie program telewizyjny, eksperymentalnie. Głownie koncerty na zywo, słuchowiska na żywo i wiadomości.
oh shit, you found a really great compilation! those were the times when artists had both good lyrics and good technique. they were educated musically. Now they are usually just products created by PR
The haircut of Niemen and outfit was like Piast- ancient Polish
Some songs are cutted
Yeah, not easy with copyrights.
Actually he had to cut his hair. Those days he could not take "a song competition" in TV having long hair.
Exactly. Niemen referred to the beginnings of the Polish state with this styling - at that time, in 1966, Poland celebrated the 1000th anniversary of the Polish state (and the adoption of baptism by prince Mieszko The First).
❤❤❤😊😊😊
What a good life those dogs have.
Niemen jakby przewidział przyszłość
raczej się niewiele zmieniło od czasu gdy to śpiewał .
7.42 LISTONOSZ... ma dla Ciebie list.
czesciej awizo
@@supreme3376 To były piekne dni... ludzie jeszcze listy pisali recznie i listonosz je rozwoził do skrzynek pocztowych na rowerze.... a co wiecej, przynosił do domu telegramy i listy polecone... Awizo to była ostateczność.
To ja proponuję "Srebrne dzwony - fragmenty oratorium na Dzień Zwycięstwa" . Ale to już lata 70-te. 🫶😘
I do hope, you treat all you dogs evenly, friends.
The best song of Czesław Niemen is Jednego Serca. It is singing by other artists in covers: by Piotr Cugowski, Mateusz Ziółko. You should to listen song: Idą casy za casami" by Skalni, Zaświeć Niesądzu" by Apolonia Nowak, Omnia nuda et Alberta by Stanisław Sojka, Korowód by Grechuta, "Od wschodu do Zachodu Słońca" and "Nie widzę Ciebie w swych marzeniach" by Skaldowie, Osiem błogosławieństw, and Mary Christmas and Happy New Year in Lesser Polish Dialect.
The best for you. I prefer "Dziwny jest ten świat/Strange is this world" i "Sen o Warszawie/A Dream about Warsaw" - also performed later by many other Polish performers
Great array of classics! Enjoyable all the way through :)
Please try listening to:
Grzegorz Turnau - Cichosza (1993)
or
Zbigniew Wodecki - Lubię Wracać Tam, Gdzie Byłem (KFPP Opole 1980)
13.43 ta artystka nadal gra live
It,s mega good compilation. Even me as a Pole don,t knew all songs. Probably we don’t appreciate what we have, but this songs where inspired by greatest stars those times. Finally I recommend review songs of „2+1” polish music trio if You like ABBA, music like that. Thank You for reaction.
Czesław Niemen's outfit and haircut come from old eastern Poland, which now belongs to Belarus. He was born there. His pseudonym Niemen comes from the name of a river from that region.
Białoruś nigdy nie należała do Polski, nie licząc okresu międzywojennego w XX wieku. To były od Średniowiecza tereny litewskie. Rzeka Niemen zawsze była określana mianem rzeki litewskiej, również przez polskich literatów, takich jak Mickiewicz, Słowacki czy Miłosz. Warto przy okazji dodać, że miasto Suwałki też nigdy przed XX wiekiem nie wchodziło w skład Królestwa Polskiego a także tereny wokół Augustowa. Jeśli chodzi o miasto Białystok, które ma w herbie litewską Pogoń, to znalazło się w granicach Królestwa Polskiego dopiero w 1569 po zawiązaniu Unii Lubelskiej, która stworzyła federacyjne państwo polsko-litewskie z dwiema nominalnymi stolicami: Krakowem (Polska) i Wilnem (Litwa). Nie muszą przypominać, że Wilno nigdy nie znalazło się w granicach Królestwa Polskiego, do końca istnienia federacji pozostało stolicą wielowiekowego sojusznika Polski. Jak później Polska potraktowała swojego wielowiekowego sojusznika, też nie muszę przypominać, wszyscy nasi sąsiedzi wiedzą jak fałszywi, zdradzieccy i zakłamani są Polacy, dlatego na ich wielką sympatię za bardzo liczyć nie możemy, niestety.
@@andrzejkowalski4021Zwykły ojkofob.
@@PiotrJaser: Wykształcony ponad swą inteligencję, biedaczek.
Dokładnie tak miał na sobie tradycyjną Białoruską koszulę z wyszywankom. Taka koszula na Białorusi kosztuje prawie 300 rubli a to sporo pieniędzy 😊
@@PiotrJaserna dobrą opinię trzeba pracować latami a stracić w jednej chwili a odpracować bardzo ciężko bo często trzeba zgiąć kark i przeprosić prosić o wybaczenie a to nam Polakom ciężko przychodzi 😢
th-cam.com/video/KoUmM-wh_Rk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=ZJmA6buIfufN8t_M
Violetta Villas. Her voice was one of the kind
Rozumiem że szukacie polskiej muzyki z tamtych lat. Tak, to były legendy tamtych czasów. Posłuchajcie może coś z nowszych nagrań, bardzo dla nas ważnych Aranhaja Kult, Jeszcze będzie przepięknie Tilt. Pozdrawiam.
Obczajcie prywatną wojnę Rafała Gan-Ganowicza takich mamy agentów 😂 Jest też taka płyta Ireny Santor 1960 r.
Poland in the 60s was a communist country, where the State controlled everything that was published. In Poland, there were 2 state television channels and 4 state radio channels. Record companies were also state-owned, there were two or three, and the circulation of their records was very limited. Of course, there was also censorship, as in every communist country, which checked the lyrics of EVERY song performed in public.
Rock & Roll was considered by the communist authorities to be a product of "rotten Western capitalism" and was barely tolerated, which is why Polish music animators came up with the term "Big Beat" and the slogan "Polish Youth Sings Polish Songs" - only thanks to this could rock and roll music exist in communist Poland, precisely under the slogan "Big Beat" - most of the artists from the above video were classified as this trend.
The authorities promoted music referring to Polish folklore, and bands that sounded too rock (read: Western) were harassed and had no chance to appear on TV or radio, it was a miracle when they released an album. There were of course a few exceptions to this rule, but it was until the very end of the 70s, when the rock boom broke out in Poland.
You got carried away by your emotions and as a result you overdid it a bit. This music (rock, blues, jazz) exploded after the end of the Stalinist period in Poland (1947-1956) and no one could stop it (during the Stalinist period such music flourished underground: it literally flourished, at private concerts and meetings). And after 1956 the authorities really had to adapt, because no prohibitions or orders worked (one of many proofs: the cult song of "Czerwone gitary", entitled "Biały krzyż/The White Cross", dedicated to the father of the lead vocalist of this band, who died fighting with the communists after 1945 during the home war in the years 1945-1947). The only thing the communist authorities could do was organize festivals, concerts in cultural centers, control the pay system in the world of culture and thanks to that control it at least a little. The resistance of Poles to communism imposed after 1945 by the USSR and the contempt for communist ideology and cultural policy were too common and strong in society. In the 1960s, Poland became the most liberal, in a political and cultural sense, communist country in Europe and the world (although still, especially in political matters, resolute anti-communism was persecuted, including political assassinations and throwing people out of work). People, at all levels and in all areas of culture, art - simply were themselves and resisted communist censorship. In addition, Western literature was officially published, it was possible to buy Western press, etc., this was a phenomenon in communist countries. Hungarians and Russians learned Polish because in Polish cultural centers in their countries they could keep up to date with what was happening in the world. This is a Polish phenomenon. The same phenomenon was responsible for the fact that only in Poland the communists failed to collectivize agriculture and the farms remained in private hands.
But you're right, the 70s were already a mega-boom for rock music, because some systemic limitations disappeared. Previously, rock music was played on the radio and tv, but mainly Polish music, or music from other communist countries, and Western rock music definitely appeared in the media less often (although in Poland everyone listened to it and knew world rock music anyway, and besides, The Rolling Stones concert took place in Warsaw in 1967, and the militia, which wanted to control the audience, turned out to be powerless). In the 70s, on the state radio, a radio show called Radiokurier appeared (which a few years later became program 3 of Polish Radio) - a separate and wildly popular music channel devoted (among others) to Polish and Western rock music, but also jazz, electronic, etc. This was a big change. And in the 1980s the communist authorities no longer had control over anything, especially since they had lost not only to people, but also to technology (they were unable to control the circulation of recordings on cassette tapes independent of state-owned companies or young people at rock festivals).
@@alh6255 Judging from the somewhat propaganda-like eulogy you wrote above, you don't have much of an idea about those times in Poland. "Control" is not the same as "forbid" - the control of the communist state consisted in allowing something, and forbidding or limiting something.
The scope of these prohibitions and restrictions decreased with time, but even in the 80s the communist authorities could do quite a lot - the top Polish band Maanam experienced this when they refused to play a concert at the Festival of Soviet Song in Zielona Góra - they were banned from broadcasting their songs on Polish Radio and Television for several months, let me remind you that there were no other stations in Poland at that time. Similarly, the band Lady Pank almost fell apart after in 1986 its leader Jan Borysewicz, very drunk, pulled out his dick during a concert organized by the Union of Socialist Polish Youth. The band suspended its activity for over a year, most of the musicians left, and the author of the lyrics of all the great Lady Pank hits publicly "cut off" Borysewicz, although he had not been bothered by other drunken excesses of the Lady Pank musicians, excesses that are still remembered by the staff of several Polish hotels - for example, the bathtub ride down the stairs of the Hotel Wrocław.
After 1989, when communism in Poland ended, the number of anti-communist fighters increased rapidly, but somehow no one except themselves heard about their "fight against communism" - as in the case of the song "Biały krzyż", which for everyone was a song about partisans fighting German Nazis, and today it turns out that the partisans fought communists.
0:50 TRUBADURZY 1968 ; 1:31 CZESLAW NIEMEN 1967 ; 3:46 WOJCIECH SKOWRONSKI , moje abc ; 4:48 CZERWONE GITARY , nie zadzieraj nosa 1966 ; 5:33 KASIA SOBCZYK , trzynastego 1967 ; 6:44 BREAKOUT , gdybys kochal hej 1969 ; SKALDOWIE , medytacje listonosza 1968 ; 8:53 TRUBADURZY , kasia ; 10:24 MACIEJ KOSSOWSKI ; 12:16 ADA RUSOWICZ ; 13:24 MARYLA RODOWICZ , zakopane 1968
Thank you! I will a add to the video description.
8:53 ?????
@@MaxSujyPOL Trubadurzy - Kasia.
th-cam.com/video/7iTOH_s5OFw/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared @@MaxSujyPOL
Skaldowie - Medytacje wiejskiego listonosza.
Posłuchajcie tego: "Kolorowe Sny (cover) - Wokaliści Dzikiego Ucha | Dzikie Ucho" (bardziej współczesne), sprawdźcie też nazwisko: Maryla Rodowicz, ciekawe czy rozpoznacie 🙂Ps. Thank you, I'm the next generation and I know most of these songs by heart. They are all about something, they are not modern gibberish.
Please record your reaction to Halina Frąckowiak's songs: "Papierowy Księżyc", "Dancing Queen" or "Tin Pan Alley".
Stan Borys-"Jaskółka uwięziona" albo "Anno" powinniście poznać
10.18 jak śpiewają... GDYBY NIE ... BYŁA BY KASIA PANNĄ JESZCZE
you should watch Niemen's daughter perform
8:37 these were the outfits worn by Polish Postmen in those years. Poland was still a fairly poor country.
9.42 to rozrywkowa Katarzyna co spacerowała do innych
1) Mówicie o wyglądzie artysty Czesław Niemen => tu jest ten utwór:
th-cam.com/video/3aRz0IVMuW8/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=Mindowe
2) A tu późniejszy wygląd i piosenka:
th-cam.com/video/dHB2Xk2Mh0w/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=ajgie
20 lat różnicy
If they don't reacting to Bracia Figo Fago i don't belive in love for polish culture. Thank you
Mam do was pytanie ? Lubicie ballady i poezję śpiewaną ? Jeśli tak posłuchajcie grupy Stare Dobre Małżeństwo i Cztery Pory Piłowania . Lub Michała Bajora czy Grzegorza Turnaua . Tego chyba jeszcze nie znacie ? Chociaż reagowaliście na Ewę Demarczyk , ale w późniejszych latach też byli piosenkarze i piosenkarki śpiewający podobną muzykę , do dzisiaj tacy są . Jak na przykład Adela Konop . Słuchaliście kiedyś wokalistki z USA Tracy Chapman ? Adela Konop ma podobny wokal , ale śpiewa trochę inaczej . Pozdrawiam , życzę udanych poszukiwań dobrej muzyki .
Am polish men is redy got job Polish culture
Not Navy. This is a song about postman.
th-cam.com/video/yQ_s2sdS160/w-d-xo.htmlsi=vWfTlKg8D4EJg4J7 the cover one of this Polish groups SKALDOWIE calls
Medytacje wiejskiego listonosza (Meditations of village postman). I love this band
make a movie about sylwia grzeszczak
Czesław Niemen - Sen o Warszawie, Jednego serca, Wspomnienie, Pod Papugami
Czerwone Gitary - Historia jednej znajomości, Kwiaty we włosach, Wróćmy na jeziora
Breakout - Gdybyś kochał hej, Poszłabym za tobą, Na drugim brzegu tęczy, Kiedy byłem małym chłopcem, Modlitwa
Maciej Kossowski - Wakacje z blondynką
Marek Grechuta - Korowód, Świecie nasz, Ocalić od zapomnienia
Maryla Rodowicz - Małgośka
th-cam.com/video/s-rmCi8sTyw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=eeFxXclpYSkDCMfY
th-cam.com/video/ARa-JpBez9M/w-d-xo.htmlsi=hHZ_WXdrWvmpTBod