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The Plastic People of the Universe (PPU) is a Czech rock band from Prague. They are considered the foremost representatives of Prague's underground culture (1968–1989), which defied Czechoslovakia's Communist regime. Members of the band often suffered serious repercussions, including arrests and prosecution, because of their non-conformist ideals. The group continues to perform, despite the death in 2001 of its founder, main composer, and bassist, Milan Hlavsa. Up to 2023, they had released nine studio albums and over a dozen live albums.
The Plastic People of the Universe | |
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Background information | |
Also known as |
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Origin | Prague, Czechoslovakia |
Genres | |
Years active | 1968–1988, 1997–present |
Labels |
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Spinoffs | Půlnoc |
Members | The Plastic People of the Universe
The Plastic People of the Universe/New Generation
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Past members | See Past members |
Website | plastic-people plasticpeople |
In 2016, the group split in two because of internal differences. The original group is composed of bandleader Josef Janíček, Vratislav Brabenec, Jaroslav Kvasnička, Johnny Judl Jr, and David Babka. The second splinter group, which performs under the name The Plastic People of the Universe/New Generation, is composed of Jiří Kabeš, Josef Karafiát, Jakub Koláček, Wenca Březina, and Vojtěch Starý.
History
editFormation and early years: 1968–1974
editFrom January to August 1968, under the rule of Communist Party leader Alexander Dubček, Czechoslovaks experienced the Prague Spring. In August, Soviet and other Warsaw Pact troops invaded the country, leading to the overthrow of Dubček's government and the period that came to be known as Normalization. Less than a month after the invasion, bassist Milan Hlavsa, who was seventeen years old at the time, formed the Plastic People of the Universe.[1] The rest of the band was composed of Michal Jernek (vocals, clarinet),[2] Jiří "Přemysl" Števich (guitar), and Josef Brabec (drums). A few months later, Pavel Zeman replaced Brabec, and guitarist and keyboardist Josef Janíček joined the band.
The group was heavily influenced by Frank Zappa and the Velvet Underground (Zappa's band, the Mothers of Invention, featured the song "Plastic People" on their 1967 album Absolutely Free and inspired the Czech group's name).[3] Czech art historian and cultural critic Ivan Jirous became the band's manager/artistic director in the following year,[1] fulfilling a role similar to Andy Warhol's with the Velvet Underground. The band's membership shifted at this point, and Jirous introduced Hlavsa to guitarist Josef Janíček[1] and viola player Jiří Kabeš, who, together with saxophone player Vratislav Brabenec, formed the core of the group, with a rotating cast of drummers that included Jiří Šula, Jaroslav Vožniak, Jan Schneider, and Jan Brabec. The consolidated Czech communist government revoked the band's musical license in 1970.[4]
Because Jirous believed that English was the lingua franca of rock music[citation needed], he invited Paul Wilson, a Canadian translator and writer who had been working in Prague, to teach the band the lyrics of the American songs they covered and translate their original Czech material into English.[citation needed] Wilson was the band's lead vocalist from 1970 to 1972. During this time, the group's repertoire drew heavily on songs by the Velvet Underground and the Fugs. The only two songs sung in Czech in this period were "Na sosnové větvi" and "Růže a mrtví", both of whose lyrics were written by Czech poet Jiří Kolář.[citation needed] Because the band was not permitted to record their music, fans circulated bootleg copies of concert material, remastered versions of which were released many years later, under the titles Muž bez uší (2002), Vožralej jak slíva (1997), Do lesíčka na čekanou (2006), Trouble every day (2002), and Ach to státu hanobení (2000).
After Wilson left, PPU drew from the poet Egon Bondy,[3] whose work had been banned by the government. In the following three years, Bondy's lyrics almost completely dominated PPU's music. In December 1974, the band recorded their first studio album, Egon Bondy's Happy Hearts Club Banned (the title being a play on the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band), which was released in France in 1978.[citation needed]
Persecution, trial, and aftermath: 1974–1988
editIn 1974, thousands of people traveled from Prague to České Budějovice to see the Plastics perform. Stopped by police, they were sent back to Prague, and several students were arrested.[5][1] The band was forced underground until the Velvet Revolution, in 1989. Unable to perform openly, an entire underground cultural movement formed around them during the 1970s. Sympathizers of the movement were often called máničky, a term referring to men with long hair during that era.[citation needed]
In 1976, the Plastics and other people from the underground scene were arrested and put on trial (after performing at the Druhý festival druhé kultury event) by the Communist government, in order to set an example. They were convicted of "organized disturbance of the peace" and sentenced to prison terms ranging from eight to eighteen months.[1] Paul Wilson was deported,[4] despite having left the band in 1972. Other artists who also suffered arrest and persecution following this event included Pavel Zajíček, Svatopluk Karásek, and František Stárek. After being released from prison, the Plastics continued to make music. In response to their persecution, they recorded a number of compositions, which were compiled on the album Kolejnice dúni, released in 2000.
Although the PPU were not associated with politics, the Communist regime's accusations against them led to various protests.[6] It was partly in response to the arrests and prosecutions that playwright Václav Havel and others wrote Charter 77.[4] The trial of the Plastics became a milestone for opposition against the Communist regime in Czechoslovakia.[7]
In 1978, PPU recorded the Easter-themed album Pašijové hry velikonoční (released in Canada as The Passion Play by Paul Wilson's imprint, Boží Mlýn Productions). Jak bude po smrti, which set the poetry of Ladislav Klíma to music, followed in 1979, and Co znamená vésti koně in 1980. In 1982, Brabenec was forced by the secret police to leave the country as part of Akce Asanace ("sanitation act"), and emigrated to Canada. After his departure, the band released the albums Hovězí porážka in 1983 and Půlnoční myš in 1986. At the time, PPU included clarinetist Petr Placák, cellist Tomáš Schilla,[8] guitarist Milan Schelinger (brother of Jiří Schelinger), and vocalist Michaela Pohanková.
Despite their clashes with the government, the musicians never considered themselves activists and always claimed that they wanted only to play their music.[3] In the spring of 1987, two legal concerts were arranged, but both were eventually canceled by the organizers, under pressure from police. This led to disputes between the band members and eventually, the group broke up. Hlavsa, Janíček, and Kabeš formed the group Půlnoc, which played publicly from 1988 and was even allowed to tour the United States a year later. Půlnoc recorded two albums in the early 1990s.[1]
Reunion, Hlavsa's death, and continuation: 1997–2014
editAfter the Velvet Revolution, in 1989, the only concert PPU held was in 1992, with the old lineup of Hlavsa, Janíček, Števich, Jernek, and Zeman. This was recorded, and released as Bez ohňů je underground in 1993. In 1997, Hlavsa, in collaboration with Jan Vozáry (Oceán), released the live album Magické noci 1997, which included older Plastic People songs in a modern electronic arrangement. The album wasn't released until 2021. Also in 1997, upon President Havel's suggestion, PPU reunited in honor of the twentieth anniversary of Charter 77.[3][4] Their lineup consisted of Hlavsa, Brabenec, Janíček, Kabeš, Brabec, as well as Joe Karafiát. They released the live album The Plastic People of the Universe the same year and continued to tour.
In 1999, along with Lou Reed, PPU performed at the White House during Václav Havel's state visit.[9]
Milan Hlavsa died of lung cancer in 2001.[1][3] Afterward, the Plastics were unsure whether or not to continue without their frontman and main songwriter, but after long discussions, they decided to honor his memory by keeping the band going. That year, they published a collection of Hlavsa's unreleased compositions, under the title Líně s tebou spím / Lazy Love – In Memoriam Mejla Hlavsa.
Eva Turnová, from DG 307, became the band's new bass player.[3] Ludvík Kandl (Hudba Praha) sat in on drums (he was replaced by Jaroslav Kvasnička in 2009) and in the years 2001–2009, double bassist Ivan Bierhanzl, who had briefly performed with the band in the 1970s, was a member of PPU.
In 2003, the Supreme Court of the Czech Republic overturned the 1976 verdicts against members of PPU. Subsequently, in collaboration with Agon Orchestra, the band re-recorded two of their older concept albums: 1979's Jak bude po smrti (recorded in 2003 and released in 2010 as Obešel já polí pět) and 1978's Pašijové hry velikonoční (recorded and released in 2004).
Interest in the band was rekindled in 2006, thanks to the play Rock 'n' Roll, by Tom Stoppard,[3] which featured two of their songs and had several characters discuss the band's music and its effects on Czech society.
In December 2009, PPU released their first studio album since 2001 as well as their first without Hlavsa, titled Maska za maskou.
In 2014, the Plastic People of the Universe teamed up with the Brno Philharmonic for a symphonic performance of their 1981 album, Co znamená vésti koně.
Disputes and division: 2015–present
editDisputes soon arose between PPU members, and a distinctive rift occurred. Kvasnička and Turnová left.[10] On 17 November 2015, the band performed again with the Brno Philharmonic, and a recording of the concert was published in 2017.[11] Since the concert had been rehearsed together with the two recently departed members, Kvasnička and Turnová were forced to perform, a decision Kabeš disagreed with, and which subsequently led to his departure. Karafiát followed suit shortly after.[10][12] After the concert, Brabenec also announced his departure and in January 2016, Janíček walked out.[10]
Kabeš and Karafiát then added bassist Tomáš Skřivánek, drummer Jan Ježek, and keyboardist Vojtěch Starý to the band's lineup and decided to continue under the name The Plastic People of the Universe/New Generation, later returning to the original name.[10] The departed members of the band (Brabenec, Janíček, Kvasnička), on the other hand, continued as a separate unit, though also using the original PPU name. They embarked on a tour with Co znamená vésti koně material, performing in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on 18 October 2016, as part of the commemoration of Václav Havel's eightieth birthday.[13] Both lineups, with bassist Johnny Judl Jr and guitarist David Babka joining Brabenec's group, subsequently performed under the same name, and arguments arose as to who the "real" Plastics were.[12]
In 2018, PPU celebrated its fiftieth anniversary. The highlight of the celebrations was a sold-out concert by Brabenec's group at Prague's Acropolis Palace.[14] Several previous members of the group participated, including Josef Rössler, Vladimír Dědek, Tomáš Schilla, Jan Brabec, and Petr Placák.
Band members
editThe Plastic People of the Universe
edit- Vratislav Brabenec – saxophone, clarinet, vocals (1972–1982, 1997–present)
- Josef Janíček – keyboards, vocals (1969–1988, 1997–present)
- Jaroslav Kvasnička – drums, vocals (2009–present)
- Johnny Judl jr. – bass, vocals (2016–present)
- David Babka – guitars (2016–present)
The Plastic People of the Universe/New Generation
edit- Jiří Kabeš – viola, theremin, vocals (1971–1988, 1997–present)
- Joe Karafiát – guitars, vocals (1997–present)
- Jakub Koláček – drums
- Wenca Březina – bass
- Vojtěch Starý – keyboards (2016–present)
Past members (selected)
edit- Milan "Mejla" Hlavsa – bass, vocals (1968–1988, 1997–2001)
- Michal Jernek – saxophone, clarinet, vocals (1968–1970)
- Jiří Števich – guitar, vocals (1968–1970, 1972)
- Josef Brabec – drums (1968–1969)
- Pavel Zeman – drums (1969–1973, 1977)
- Paul Wilson – guitar, vocals (1970–1972)
- Jan Jílek – trumpet (1972)
- Jiří Šula – drums (1973–1974)
- Jaroslav Vožniak – drums (1974–1977)
- Otakar Michl – guitar (1977)
- Jan Brabec – drums (1977–1988, 1997–1999)
- Pavel Zajíček – vocals (1978)
- Jaroslav Unger – vocals (1978)
- Ladislav Leština – electric violin, theremin (1978, 1980–1986)
- Ivan Bierhanzl – double bass (1978–1979, 2001–2009)
- Jan Schneider – percussion (1978)
- Josef "Bobeš" Rössler – clarinet, vocals (1980–1981)
- Petr Placák – clarinet (1983)
- Václav Stádník – clarinet (1983)
- Jan Macháček – guitar (1984)
- Vladimír Dědek – trombone (1984–1986)
- Milan Schelinger – guitar (1986–1987)
- Michaela Pohanková – vocals (1986–1988)
- Tomáš Schilla – cello (1986–1988)
- Ludvík "Eman" Kandl – drums (1999–2009)
- Eva Turnová – bass, vocals (2001–2015)
- Tomáš Skřivánek – bass (PPU/New Generation – 2016–2018)
- Jan Ježek – drums (PPU/New Generation – 2016–2018)
Discography
editStudio albums | ||||
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Name | Year recorded | Released overseas | Released in ČR | Notes |
Egon Bondy's Happy Hearts Club Banned | 1975 | Boží Mlýn (Canada), SCOPA Invisible (France), 1978 | Globus, 2001 | |
Pašijové hry velikonoční | 1978 | Boží Mlýn, 1980 | Globus, 1998 | |
Jak bude po smrti | 1979 | Globus, 1992 | ||
Co znamená vésti koně | 1981 | Boží Mlýn, 1983 | Globus, 2002 | |
Kolejnice duní | 1977–1982 | Globus, 2000 | ||
Hovězí porážka | 1984 | Globus, 1992 | ||
Půlnoční myš | 1986 | Freedonia (UK), 1987 | Globus, 2001 | |
Líně s tebou spím / Lazy Love | 2001 | Globus, 2001 | subtitled In Memoriam Mejla Hlavsa | |
Maska za maskou | 2009 | Guerilla, 2009 |
Live albums | |||
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Name | Year recorded | Released in ČR | Notes |
Muž bez uší | 1969–1972 | Globus, 2002 | |
Do lesíčka na čekanou | 1973 | Guerilla, 2006 | Double album |
Vožralej jak slíva | 1973–1975 | Globus, 1997 | |
Ach to státu hanobení | 1976–1977 | Globus, 2000 | |
Trouble Every Day | 1971–1977 | Globus, 2002 | Covers |
Bez ohňů je underground | 1992 | Globus, 1993 | |
The Plastic People of the Universe | 1997 | Aion/Globus, 1997 | |
Pašijové hry | 2004 | Knihy Hana s.r.o., 2004 | with Agon Orchestra |
Obešel já polí pět | 2003 | Guerilla, 2010 | with Agon Orchestra |
Non Stop Opera | 2011 | Guerilla, 2011 | |
Co znamená vésti koně | 2015 | Indies Happy Trails, 2017 | with Brno Philharmonic |
Apokalyptickej pták | 1976 | Galén, 2017 | |
Magické noci 1997 | 1997 | Guerilla, 2021 | |
Pražský hrad live 1997 | 1997 | Guerilla, 2022 |
Compilations | ||
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Name | Released | Notes |
10 let Globusu aneb underground v kostce | Globus, 2000 | Double album |
Milan Hlavsa – Než je dnes člověku 50 – poslední dekáda | Globus, 2001 | Double album |
Magor's Shem (40 Year Anniversary Tour PPU 1968–2008) | 2008 | |
Vzpomínka na Mejlu – Live Fléda 2002 – 2013 | 2021 | 2-DVD tribute to Milan Hlavsa by PPU and others |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g Yanosik, Joseph (March 1996). "The Plastic People of the Universe". Perfect Sound Forever. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
- ^ "Nechal jsem toho, kapela byla v ruinách, ale Mejla se nechtěl vzdávat – Michal Jernek" [I left, the band was in ruins, but Mejla did not want to give up – Michal Jernek]. guerilla.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g Stoppard, Tom (19 December 2009). "Tom Stoppard: Did Plastic People of the Universe topple communism?". Times Online. Retrieved 20 December 2009.[dead link ]
- ^ a b c d Unterberger, Richie. "The Plastic People of the Universe". Retrieved 26 February 2007.
- ^ "Rudolfov u Českých Budějovic aneb "Budějovický masakr", březen 1974" [Rudolfov near České Budějovice, or "The Budějovice Massacre", March 1974]. ceskatelevize.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ Bolton, Jonathan (2012). Worlds of Dissent: Charter 77, The Plastic People of the Universe, and Czech Culture Under Communism. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06483-6.[page needed]
- ^ "Plastic People acted as if the Bolsheviks did not exist". presov.korzar.sme.sk. 3 December 2009. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ "Mašurkovské podzemné" [Mashurkov underground]. guerilla.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ "Milan Hlavsa 1951–2001". robertchristgau.com. 15 February 2001. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Undergroundová legenda Plastic People se rozdělila na dvě části" [Underground legend Plastic People split into two parts]. idnes.cz (in Czech). 17 May 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
- ^ "Co znamená vésti koně – Plastic People s Filharmonií Brno na CD" [Co znamená vésti koně – Plastic People with Brno Philharmonic on CD]. hudba.proglas.cz (in Czech). 29 June 2017. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
- ^ a b "Rozhovor s The Plastic People Of The Universe o hudbě, duchu doby a skládání písniček" [An interview with The Plastic People of the Universe about music, zeitgeist, and songwriting]. hudebniknihovna.cz (in Czech). 30 March 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
- ^ "Václav Havel commemorations shape up for 2016". english.radio.cz. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
- ^ "Recenze: Staré hudbě nového ducha. Plastic People oslavili 50 let vyprodanou Akropolí" [Review: Old music with a new spirit. Plastic People celebrated 50 years with a sold-out Acropolis]. magazin.aktualne.cz (in Czech). 2 December 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
External links
edit- Official website
- The Plastic People of the Universe/New Generation official website
- The Plastic People of the Universe at AllMusic
- Documentary film produced by Česká televize: The Plastic People of the Universe. Director – Jana Chytilová
- Article in Prague Life
- Interview with Paul Wilson
- Interview/profile in the Washington Post's Express (archived)
- "A Consumer Guide to the Plastic People of the Universe" by Joseph Yanosik, 2021