Zlatý slavík
Appearance
(Redirected from Golden Nightingale)
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2024) |
Zlatý slavík | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Popularity in the Czechoslovak music industry |
Country | Czechoslovakia |
First awarded | 1962 |
Last awarded | 1991 |
Zlatý slavík (English: Golden Nightingale) was a Czechoslovak music poll and award of the same name established by the magazines Mladý svět and Smena na nedeľu in 1962, and broadcast on television. It was held until 1991, when it was replaced by Český slavík.
In the first year of the poll, 797 votes were returned; the highest vote tally registered in its 29-year history was over 115,000.[1]
Winners
[edit]Over the years, award categories were occasionally changed.
Year | Male singer | Female singer | Group | Singer – male/female | Song |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1962 | – | – | – | Waldemar Matuška | "Láska nebeská" (Jiří Šlitr/Jiří Suchý) |
1963 | – | – | – | Karel Gott | "Oči sněhem zaváté" (Šlitr/Suchý) |
1964 | Karel Gott | Eva Pilarová | – | – | "Schody do nebe" (Karel Kopecký/Jindřich Faktor) |
1965 | Karel Gott | Helena Vondráčková | – | – | "Cesta rájem" (Artie Glenn/Jiří Štaidl) |
1966 | Karel Gott | Marta Kubišová | – | – | |
1967 | Waldemar Matuška | Eva Pilarová | – | – | "Náhrobní kámen" (Petr Novák/Ivo Plicka) |
1968 | Karel Gott | Marta Kubišová | – | – | "Lady Carneval" (Karel Svoboda/Štaidl) |
1969 | Karel Gott | Marta Kubišová | |||
1970 | Karel Gott | ||||
1971 | Karel Gott | Eva Pilarová | |||
1972 | Karel Gott | Naďa Urbánková | |||
1973 | Karel Gott | Naďa Urbánková | |||
1974 | Karel Gott | Naďa Urbánková | |||
1975 | Karel Gott | Naďa Urbánková | |||
1976 | Karel Gott | Naďa Urbánková | |||
1977 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Skupina Ladislava Štaidla | ||
1978 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Skupina Ladislava Štaidla | ||
1979 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Katapult | ||
1980 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Katapult | ||
1981 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Olympic | ||
1982 | Miroslav Žbirka | Hana Zagorová | Olympic | ||
1983 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Olympic | ||
1984 | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Elán | ||
1985 | Peter Nagy | Hana Zagorová | Elán | ||
1986 | Dalibor Janda | Iveta Bartošová | Elán | ||
1987 | Dalibor Janda | Petra Janů | Elán | ||
1988 | Dalibor Janda | Petra Janů | Citron | ||
1989 | Karel Gott | Petra Janů | Team | ||
1990 | Karel Gott | Iveta Bartošová | Team | ||
1991 | Pavol Habera | Iveta Bartošová | Team |
Top winners
[edit]With 22 Zlatý slavík awards, Karel Gott is the most successful artist in the history of the poll, followed by Hana Zagorová, who scored nine wins, and Naďa Urbánková, with five awards.
Rank | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
---|---|---|---|
Artist | Karel Gott | Hana Zagorová | Naďa Urbánková |
Total awards | 22 | 9 | 5 |
Successors
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Zlatý slavík – History". Český slavík Mattoni (in Czech). Musica Bohemica. ceskyslavik.cz. Retrieved 10 April 2011.