Petr Novák (musician)

Petr Novák
Background information
Birth name Petr Novák
Born (1945-09-06)6 September 1945
Prague, Czechoslovakia
Died 19 August 1997(1997-08-19) (aged 51)
Prague, Czech Republic
Genres Pop, rock and roll, psychedelic
Occupation(s) singer-songwriter, musical artist, performer, writer
Years active 1963—1997
Website Official Web Site

Petr Novák (6 September 1945 – 19 August 1997) was a Czech rock musician. He is best known for his romantic Beatles inspired pop songs with his bands George and Beatovens and Flamengo in the late 1960s.

Biography

Born in Prague, at the age of six, he began playing the piano. He originally aspired to become an actor, until hearing the Beatles and their lively Mersey sound music and starting a band with his friends. This band was briefly named The Beatles, but soon renamed George and Beatovens. Their western style music was popular with the Czech youth and they quickly rose to popularity as one of the nations most popular bands. especially during the Prague Spring. Their success was short lived. Soon the allies of the Warsaw Pact invaded and the Warsaw Pact occupation began. Afterwards, he began a solo career and his fame continued to grow, despite strict government regulations.

The new, more conservative administration, who frowned upon Petr's western influenced music and his notorious hard partying and heavy drinking, encouraged venuesm local and national gigs not to hire Petr to perform. His career reached its peak c. 1975 with the release of his last truly successful album "Kráska a zvíře", and afterwards it led to a slow decline along with his growing alcohol problems brought his days as a popular and influential musician to a halt. His music suffered after longtime collaborator and lyricist Ivo Plicka fled the country in the late seventies, therefore the quality of his music, his voice, and his songs deteriorated. Although he continued until his death, his musical output never reached the critical success of his earlier work. In fact, many of the albums released in the 1980s proved to be both critical and commercial failures. There was renewed interest in his music after the Velvet Revolution, but he was too ill to re-establish himself in popular culture.

He died in 1997, with his death certificate stating "suspect poisoning by unidentifiable poison X-49".[1][2]

Bands

Discography

Albums

Singles

References

  1. O'Connor, Coilin (7 February 2012). "Petr Novák: The man who wrote the soundtrack for the Prague Spring". Radio Prague. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  2. "Úmrtní list Petra Nováka". Blog.cz. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
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