Sanatçının Albümleri
Mam tu swój dom
2021 · albüm
Jazz Jamboree '63
2020 · albüm
Original Jazz Movie Soundtracks, Vol. 5
2019 · albüm
Ballet Etudes
2013 · mini albüm
Krzysztof Komeda: Quartet 1961 (Remastered)
2012 · mini albüm
Krzysztof Komeda: Trio 1960 (Remastered)
2012 · mini albüm
Komeda
2011 · albüm
Live At The Jazz Jamboree Festival 1961-1967
2011 · albüm
Cul-De-Sac & Knife In The Water
2005 · albüm
Fearless Vampire Killers
2005 · albüm
Le Départ
2005 · albüm
Astigmatic (Polish Jazz)
1965 · albüm
Benzer Sanatçılar
Swietliki
Sanatçı
Krzysztof Komeda Trio
Sanatçı
Wojtek Mazolewski Quintet
Sanatçı
Leszek Możdżer
Sanatçı
Daniel Bloom
Sanatçı
Voo Voo
Sanatçı
Jan Ptaszyn Wróblewski
Sanatçı
Tomasz Stanko Quintet
Sanatçı
Jazzpospolita
Sanatçı
Laboratorium
Sanatçı
Tomasz Stańko
Sanatçı
Novi Singers
Sanatçı
Niemen
Sanatçı
Biyografi
Jazz musician and film composer Krzysztof Komeda is best known for his film scores for the movies of Roman Polanski and Ingmar Bergman. Born Krzysztof Trzcinski in 1931, he used "Komeda" as his last name because of Communism disfavor with jazz music. Professionally an ear, nose, and throat specialist, Komeda composed and played jazz piano, and was well received at the 1956 Sopot Jazz Festival. Komeda's chief musical accomplishments were in free jazz. Komeda performed and recorded with trumpeter Tomasz Stanko (from 1963 on) and Swedish tenor saxophonist Bernt Rosengren. His album Astigmatic (1965) is acknowledged as his masterpiece. His best-known work, however, was in the realm of film scores, which he focused on increasingly in the last years before his death. He scored over 40 films for directors including Polanski, Bergman, Andrzej Wajda, Henning Carlsen, and more. After composing the score for Polanski's famed American movie debut, Rosemary's Baby, Komeda was severely injured in a car wreck in Los Angeles. After emerging from a coma, Komeda returned to his wife, Zofia, in Warsaw, and died in 1969, not yet 40 years old. In 1998, the Power Brothers label reissued the much-hailed Memory of Bach, 1967's Nighttime, Daytime Requiem, and Mojo Ballada, which includes a different recording of the music for Polanski's Knife in the Water and pieces for Miroslaw Kijowicz's cartoons. ~ Joslyn Layne, Rovi