Red Piano
A restaurant and a jazz club are located on Krakow’s main square. The interior is reminiscent of a royal room and makes a great impression on visitors. Strong, stone walls covered with red and gold fabrics compose on a wonderful atmosphere of this place. The most distinctive items of the club are: a bar imitating the piano and one old piano located in a restaurant hall. In this wonderful interior you can try Polish and Italian cuisine, delicious drinks and listen to jazz.
Alchemy
Large club (170 square meters) with a great atmosphere. It consists of 6 rooms, each of which has its own name, such as: “Heaven”, “Hell”, “Alchemy” and so on. Music: jazz, folk, Hawaiian and Cuban. But it’s not just a music club. Concerts and cultural events are often organized such as: shows and film shows, as well.
Café Integracja
A place full of comfortable sofas and chairs. Club contains 3 rooms, balcony and dance floor. Special discounts are available for students. A characteristic object of this place is a charming fireplace. Musical offer is very diverse and original. From Monday to Thursday the club is dominated by “music of places” (“budda bar”, “cafe del mar”). Friday is the royal day and Saturday – Oldies Goldies.
What would our life be like without music?
A couple of words that come to mind would be “colorless” and “colorless”. Possibly the most outspoken opponents probably have at least a basic appreciation of 강남풀싸롱. For many of us our most vivid memories can be triggered by music. Only a few beats of a particular melody can take us back to very specific times, places, and events in our lives. Those memories often lay dormant until revived with special music. Sometimes those memories are bright and soothing. Sometimes they are not. Music stimulates reactions within the listener that cover the entire emotional spectrum. Our rich history of music players, and their development, has been the direct result of our love for the medium.
The History of Music Players Began with Edison:
Thomas Edison introduced the Phonograph also commonly called the Gramophone in 1877. The Edison Phonograph was the first device that could both record, and replay, sound. This was a revolutionary development. By 1877, back through the millennia, music could only be heard in real time. Large musical performances could not be recorded and were, therefore, not available for wider consumption. You were either one of the lucky members of the live audience or you had to rely on repeated live performances that may or may not have been the same as the original. There was no recorded music in the home. Imagine that.
Edison’s Phonograph, like all initial standard-breaking inventions, was crude in design and function. The sound quality was poor and the device had to be cranked by hand. However, Edison began the development that would fundamentally change the way we consume music and forever change the impact of music on our lives. There would be no history of music players without that first Edison Phonograph.
Important Step Forward:
Vinyl records and the turntable. Aside from the fact that vinyl records are coming back, there is a very large portion of the population who have never heard a vinyl record spinning on a turntable. Those people deserve our sympathy. For warmth of sound nothing comes close to vinyl. It does not matter the inevitable scratches, the wear of the needle or the occasional deformation; vinyl records and their turntables had a magic that digital development could not capture. The sheer excitement of pulling an album out of his sleeve for the first time and gently placing it on a turntable can’t be overstated. It goes beyond mere nostalgia. The album covers themselves were often works of art to be enjoyed along with the records. Albums and turntables were a much more palpable experience than any other kind of music playback device … maybe that’s what leads to their revival.
The Great Leap Forward (???):
Then we come to the much besieged 8 Track Cassette Player. This infamous technology entered the scene during the mid-60s and survived until the late 70s. Most of its notoriety is well deserved. They were extremely high maintenance, requiring one to carry various chemical cleaners, pencils, screwdrivers, tape and other various tools just to keep things running smoothly. They hissed, they “clicked” from track to track, and about once a day they ground to a halt revealing an involved mess of tape that had to be discharged and rewound. But they had one glorious advantage … you could play them in your car! They were portable, although “portable” meant that if you wanted to carry your tape collection in your car, you needed a small steamer to do that.
Musical clubs:
One byproduct of the appearance of the 8 track cassette was the introduction of music clubs. Clubs that offered a naive teenager a huge ie