Pałacyk Michla (Micha's Palace) is a 1944 song by poet and insurgent Józef Szczepański. Written during the Warsaw Uprising, it is one of his best known songs. During the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 the Michler's Palace in Warsaw was a site of intense fighting around August 4 and 5 involving the Parasol Battalion insurgent unit. Insurgent poet Józef Szczepański, a member of the Parasol unit, wrote a song (Pałacyk Michla) about those events, performing it in its vicinity on the evening of August 4. The song, published shortly afterward in an insurgent newspaper, quickly gained popularity among the partisans, was performed for them by a popular singer Mieczysław Fogg, and later, became known in the entire Poland. On the next day the Germans captured the building, which, damaged in the fighting, w
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| - Pałacyk Michla (en)
- Pałacyk Michla (piosenka powstańcza) (pl)
|
rdfs:comment
| - Pałacyk Michla (Micha's Palace) is a 1944 song by poet and insurgent Józef Szczepański. Written during the Warsaw Uprising, it is one of his best known songs. During the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 the Michler's Palace in Warsaw was a site of intense fighting around August 4 and 5 involving the Parasol Battalion insurgent unit. Insurgent poet Józef Szczepański, a member of the Parasol unit, wrote a song (Pałacyk Michla) about those events, performing it in its vicinity on the evening of August 4. The song, published shortly afterward in an insurgent newspaper, quickly gained popularity among the partisans, was performed for them by a popular singer Mieczysław Fogg, and later, became known in the entire Poland. On the next day the Germans captured the building, which, damaged in the fighting, w (en)
- Pałacyk Michla, pierw. Parasol – wojenny hymn harcerskiego Batalionu „Parasol”, powstały w czasie powstania warszawskiego 4 sierpnia 1944. Hymn ułożył Józef „Ziutek” Szczepański; melodia Hymnu Podhalańskiego (rozpoczynającego się od słów Nie damy Popradowej fali, sł. Zygmunt Lubertowicz; muz. J. Stiastnego, niekiedy podaje się, że to melodia ludowa). (pl)
|
dct:subject
| |
Wikipage page ID
| |
Wikipage revision ID
| |
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
| |
sameAs
| |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
has abstract
| - Pałacyk Michla (Micha's Palace) is a 1944 song by poet and insurgent Józef Szczepański. Written during the Warsaw Uprising, it is one of his best known songs. During the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 the Michler's Palace in Warsaw was a site of intense fighting around August 4 and 5 involving the Parasol Battalion insurgent unit. Insurgent poet Józef Szczepański, a member of the Parasol unit, wrote a song (Pałacyk Michla) about those events, performing it in its vicinity on the evening of August 4. The song, published shortly afterward in an insurgent newspaper, quickly gained popularity among the partisans, was performed for them by a popular singer Mieczysław Fogg, and later, became known in the entire Poland. On the next day the Germans captured the building, which, damaged in the fighting, was demolished shortly after. The song has been called Szczepański's most famous song. The song's tune was based on an earlier, pre-war Polish song "Nie damy Popradowej fali". That tune has been authored by the Slovak composer Jan Šťastný. (en)
- Pałacyk Michla, pierw. Parasol – wojenny hymn harcerskiego Batalionu „Parasol”, powstały w czasie powstania warszawskiego 4 sierpnia 1944. Hymn ułożył Józef „Ziutek” Szczepański; melodia Hymnu Podhalańskiego (rozpoczynającego się od słów Nie damy Popradowej fali, sł. Zygmunt Lubertowicz; muz. J. Stiastnego, niekiedy podaje się, że to melodia ludowa). Według wspomnień Janusza Brochwicz-Lewińskiego „Gryfa” piosenka powstała w Pałacyku Michla 4 sierpnia 1944 roku wieczorem, podczas kolacji towarzyskiej załogi Pałacyku Michla i żołnierzy innych kompanii. Pałacyk Michla to inna nazwa Pałacyku Michlera, znajdującego się przy ul. Wolskiej 40 na warszawskiej Woli. Na początku powstania (4–5 sierpnia) miejsce ciężkich walk obronnych „Parasola”. Piosenkę śpiewał Mieczysław Fogg. Utwór doczekał się współczesnej interpretacji zespołu Armia. Został on również wykonany przez zespoły Raz, Dwa, Trzy i Percival Schuttenbach, a fragment wykorzystał zespół Lao Che w utworze „Barykada” na płycie Powstanie Warszawskie. (pl)
|
prov:wasDerivedFrom
| |
page length (characters) of wiki page
| |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
| |
is Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
of | |
is foaf:primaryTopic
of | |