Mike Watt
Podcast: https://www.twfps.com/past-episodes/on-air-guest-grzegorz-kwiatkowski-from-gdansk-poland-via-skype
Podcast: https://www.twfps.com/past-episodes/on-air-guest-grzegorz-kwiatkowski-from-gdansk-poland-via-skype
Existencia accidental: una conversación con Grzegorz Kwiatowski de Trupa Trupa.
Podcast from 1:23:00 www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000mrl2
Gig alert: Green Zoo Festival
According to Metro, they are combining post-punk and psych with skill. “The Beatles sing Joy Division oversimplifies them but doesn’t misrepresent them”. According to The Guardian, “the band’s music blends off-kilter melodies, dense instrumentation and lyrical explorations of the darkest side of the human condition”.
The Polish indie rock group Trupa Trupa, which translates roughly as Troupe of Corpses, takes on serious issues of the day, such as Holocaust denial and populism. During a rehearsal, band member Rafał Wojczal plays a guitar he fashioned out of an olican.
How is it that a small psychedelic band from Gdańsk has fans that include Henry Rollins and journalists from ‘Pitchfork’ and ‘Time’ magazine? Culture.pl’s Filip Lech speaks to Trupa Trupa frontman Grzegorz Kwiatkowski.
Gdańsk-based indie rock group that has taken international markets by storm and for years has been showing that Polish musicians can achieve international success.
Le groupe polonais entrevoit enfin la lumière après dix ans d’existence. Coup de fil à son chanteur foufou et attachant.
We are happy to share with you our Tiny Desk home concert from our dark studio in Gdańsk. Thank you Bob Boilen and NPR Music! Check it out!
Les chaussures invisibles du camp de concentration de Stutthof.
We did get to talk with Dirk Baart from Dutch Front Magazine.
All I can say is: there is a lot to look forward to as far as new music that we’re going to get into and I can not wait to start playing this music for you. Right now from the „I’ll find” four track record. This is Trupa Trupa! The track called „I’ll find”. Podcast: www.kcrw.com
’It would be brilliant if our music made the world better’. That’s what Polish avant-garde rocker GRZEGORZ KWIATKOWSKI hopes but, says Michal Boncza, he isn’t holding his breath.
I’ve been corresponding with Grzegorz Kwiatkowski, singer and guitarist of Polish post-punk-art-psych outfit Trupa Trupa for a few years now. I was feeling pretty down last week (and maybe it seeped into my column (okay, it did)), and I told Grzegorz a bit about some of the stuff that was bothering me. He had the most helpful and reassuring reply.
Dive into our friends & polish psych rock four piece Trupa Trupa’s latest EP „I’ll Find” — consisting of four radiant, kaleidoscopic songs which further cement the band’s reputation as one of the up & coming voices on the global psychedelic scene.
As a part of her “Phone a Friend” series, Morning Show host Jill Riley has been checking in with various musicians over the phone. She made an international call to Poland to chat with Grzegorz Kwiatkowski of the indie rock band Trupa Trupa about how the coronavirus affected the release cycle for their new EP, I’ll Find, as well as the history of their hometown, and their plans for the future.
Grzegorz Kwiatkowski: „Maybe we’ll establish a better community worldwide in the future. Very often this kind of tragic situation brings some light and hope and new solutions for the whole world. I think we should have an optimism. I’m sure that because of the darkness we can produce some light.”
We are featured in German Ox-Fanzine. Danke schoen!