Vladimír Mišík (born 8 March 1947)[1] is a Czech musician and politician. He is the founder or co-founder of the bands Matadors, Blue Effect, and Etc....
Career
Music
Mišík founded his first band, Uragán, as a teenager.[2] Later, he became the lead singer of Komety, where he met Radim Hladík, with whom he also played in Fontána (later known as The Matadors). He also sang in Karel Duba's band. In 1968, Mišík and Hladík co-founded the band Blue Effect.[3][4]
In 1970, Mišík left Blue Effect and became a member of Flamengo, with whom he recorded Kuře v hodinkách, the only studio album the band released.[5] The record, published in 1972, was banned by the Communist regime under Normalization and the group broke up the same year. During this period, Mišík also briefly sang with Energit.
In 1974, he founded his own band, called Etc..., with which he is active to this day. He also occasionally performed with Vladimír Merta and Jan Hrubý in the folk rock band Čundrgrund.
In 1982, Mišík was banned from performing by the Communist government, though he was permitted to resume musical activities by 1985.[6][7]
In 2007, after dealing with serious health problems, Mišík returned to performing with Etc...[9]
In 2012, on the fortieth anniversary of Flamengo's Kuře v hodinkách, Mišík joined the briefly reunited group onstage at Prague's Palác Akropolis for a concert that included two of his Etc... bandmates, as well as other guest musicians.[10]
In 2016, director Jitka Němcová filmed the feature documentary Nechte zpívat Mišíka about the artist.[11]
His 2019 album, Jednou Tě Potkám, was nominated for IMPALA's European Independent Album of the Year Award.[12] A year later, it won six Anděl Awards, in the categories Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, Song of the Year, Video of the Year, Best Folk Album, and Best Rock Album.[13]
In April 2021, the musician announced that he would cease to perform, for health reasons.[14]
In October 2013, he refused to accept a state award from President Miloš Zeman, as an expression of dissatisfaction with some recent decisions made by the Czech leader.[16]
Personal life
Mišík's father, John Gaugan, was an American soldier, and his mother was a Slovak nurse who worked for the Red Cross in Germany at the end of World War II. In 2017, he learned that he has another nine siblings in the United States.[17]
Mišík has three children. Two of them, Martin and Adam, are also musicians.
Požár na obloze (1988 – reinterpretation of Jaromír Pelc's poetry)[20]
Pár tónů, které přebývají (1989 – reinterpretation of Václav Hrabě's poetry)
Vladimír Mišík & Mirek Kovářík – Reduta Blues (2013)[21]
Tributes
Bazarem proměn: A Tribute to Vladimír Mišík (2015)
References
^Jaromír Tůma (10 March 2009). "Mišík, Vladimír". Český hudební slovník (in Czech). Centrum hudební lexikografie. Archived from the original on 3 March 2021. Retrieved 3 March 2021.