Neznámy pár

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"Neznámy pár"
OPUS
Songwriter(s)
YouTube

Neznámy pár (English: An Unknown Couple) is a duet by

OPUS in 1987.[1]

The composition wrote

Hrajme píseň"), a trio recorded in collaboration with Czech actor Josef Laufer.[3]

The duet itself was officially released on Gombitová's studio album entitled Ateliér duše (1987), and received a nomination for Zlatá nota, awarded by publicists of the Melodie magazine.[4]

Later on, "Neznámy pár" was issued on Gott's compilation Zůstanu svůj: Hity z 80. let, which charted at number #9 on the

Czech Top 50 albums chart in 2008.[5]

Official versions

  1. "Neznámy pár" - Studio version, 1987

Credits and personnel

  • Marika Gombitová - lead vocal, writer
  • Karel Gott - lead vocal
  • Vašo Patejdl
    - piano, keyboards, LinnDrum computer, chorus
  • Kamil Peteraj - lyrics
  • Juraj Burian - electric and acoustic guitar
  • Andrej Šeban - electric guitar
  • Michal Důžek - chorus
  • Peter Penthor - chorus
  • Trend band - chorus
  • Štefan Danko - responsible editor
  • Peter Smolinský - producer
  • Juraj Filo - sound director
  • Jozef Krajčovič - sound director
  • Ivan Minárik - technical coordination

Awards

Melodie

Melodie was a modern music magazine (similarly to American Billboard) established in 1963 as a monthly periodical in Czechoslovakia. For the time of being, a bi-weekly rival entitled as Aktuality Melodie (also known as Áčko) was effective (1969–70). The magazine itself survived almost three decades, ceasing its operations in 1991.[6] Apart from winning the Tip Melodie award as the Best Female Singer (1979), Gombitová and Gott scored with the 87's duet at number #7 (respectively at #8)A as Best Performer.[7]

Year Nominated work Category Result
1987 "Neznámy pár" Best Performer #7A
#8A
Notes

See also

References

General
Specific
  1. ^ For Marika Gombitová's discography, see Lehotský 2008a, pp. 54–56..
  2. ^ Graclík & Nekvapil 2008, p. 177.
  3. ^ Graclík & Nekvapil 2008, p. 424.
  4. ^ a b Graclík & Nekvapil 2008, p. 418.
  5. ČNS IFPI
    . ifpi.cz. Retrieved 2011-07-12.
  6. ^ "Czech Musical Vocabulary Of People & Institutions". Ústav hudební vědy (in Czech). Filozofická fakulta Masarykovy univerzity. ceskyhudebnislovnik.cz. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  7. ^ Graclík & Nekvapil 2008, pp. 417–418.

External links