Home » Entertainment » A reissue of the album Strange Signs Desire is published for Miki Ryvoly’s 80th birthday

A reissue of the album Strange Signs Desire is published for Miki Ryvoly’s 80th birthday

An important part of the CD and the digital version of the album are 13 bonuses selected by Miroslav Černý. In 1981, he was at the starting point of the album, said Davod Landštof from Supraphon.

Miki Ryvola worked with the late brother Jiří Wabi Ryvola in the Hoboes group. The other members of the band at the time, Jarka Vrbová, Marcela Koťátková and Jindřich Pedro Pitra, as well as a number of studio guests such as Ivan, Vojta and Eva Zich and Bohumil Sýkora, contributed to the creation of the special sign.

“Wabi and Miki respected the First Republic tramp tradition, but they were not ashamed to add echoes of the beloved Liberated Theater, non-traditional guitar swing elements and to transcend the outgoing cowboy romance in the lyrics. Their songs are admirably memorable, thanks to the lyrics extremely singing and thematically so interesting that they are far from suitable not only for the weekend for those who go out into the woods, waters and slopes, “said Landštof.

She loves books

A special sign of desire is offered by many of Miki Ryvol’s hits such as Spring Courier, Journey to Iceland or Tunnel named Time, which have become part of tramp romance. “A song is a child that you let into the world, and it already lives its own life,” said Miki Ryvola some time ago.

Songwriter, singer and guitarist Miki Ryvola was born on April 12, 1942 in Kladno. He played with his older brother Wabi for a long time in the tramp band Hoboes, later he performed alone or with members of the band Nezmaři. In 1956, he founded the Golden Key tramp settlement with his friends. In 1960 he graduated from the School of Ceramics in Bechyně. He is the author of the books Tom Kečup and the Dog Vorčestr, Potlach, Kniha – přítel člověka, Trampské anecdoty and others. He also specializes in artistic ceramics, exhibiting in České Budějovice, Loket or at the Kozel chateau near Pilsen.

For many years he worked as an editor at the People’s Publishing House in the Metro Palace in Prague. “Making books is a great pleasure, the book is a wonderful artifact and today’s viewing of various screens sincerely scares me. The book develops imagination, there is no romance without imagination, there is probably no tramping without romance … And I really can’t imagine virtual tramping, “he said in one of the interviews.

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