> Grodna region > Ščučyn county > Staryja Vasiliški village > Birthplace of Czesław Niemen
Birthplace of Czesław Niemen
What to see:
Lost heritage
Famous people

Find your roots in Belarus and Lithuania
Administrative details of Poland before 1939, list of parishes, search for surnames and localities

Birthplace of Czesław Niemen


 - . Wydrzycki house in Staryja Vasiliški

Wydrzycki house in Staryja Vasiliški

 - . Wydrzycki house

Wydrzycki house

 - . Wydrzycki house

Wydrzycki house

 - . Wydrzycki house

Wydrzycki house

 - . Wydrzycki house

Wydrzycki house

 - . Czesław Niemen with his childhood friends near the church in Staryja Vasiliški (photo from http://pahonia.promedia.by)

Czesław Niemen with his childhood friends near the church in Staryja Vasiliški (photo from http://pahonia.promedia.by)

Czesław Niemen (real name Czesław Juliusz Wydrzycki) (February 16, 1939 - January 17, 2004) was one of the most important and original Polish rock musicians, singing mainly in the Polish language.

Niemen was born in Wasiliszki in Grodno district. He was a singer with a wide voice scale and rich intonation, a composer and a keyboard player. He made his debut in the early 1960s, singing a Polish kind of rock and roll and soul music. His song of 1967, Dziwny jest ten świat (Strange Is This World) became the most important Polish protest song of that era. He was one of the first Poles to wear long hair and colourful clothes, introducing psychedelia style to communist Poland. The first three records he recorded with his band "Akwarele" (The Watercolour Paintings), later he recorded with his new bands: "Enigmatic", "Grupa Niemen" and "Aerolit". In 1969 he changed musical style to progressive rock, recording the monumental album Enigmatic. The most notable song from it was Bema pamięci żałobny rapsod (A Mournful Rhapsody in Memory of Jozef Bem), based on the 19th century poem by Cyprian Kamil Norwid. The rest of Enigmatic songs were poetry as well. Niemen played Hammond organ, later mellotron and Moog synthesizer on his records.

In the early 1970s, Niemen recorded three English language albums under the CBS label, and in 1974 he recorded Mourner's Rhapsody with Jan Hammer and Rick Laird from Mahavishnu Orchestra. In the seventies, Niemen turned to jazz-rock fusion and electronic music (Katharsis album). Later, he has also composed film soundtrack and theater music. In the 1990s he also showed interest in painting and computer graphics. He died of cancer in Warsaw.

Source:
Czesław Niemen
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This text is taken from Wikipedia and published at Radzima.org according to GNU Free Documentation License