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Strachy na Lachy
Strachy na Lachy
1
Myslovitz
Myslovitz
Polish rock band
2
Kroke
Kroke
Polish world music band
3
Marek Jackowski
Marek Jackowski
Polish musician
4
Czesław Niemen
Czesław Niemen
Polish rock musician
5
Armia
Armia
Polish band
6
Leszek Możdżer
Leszek Możdżer
Polish musician
7
Kult
Kult
Polish rock band
8
Tomasz Szukalski
Tomasz Szukalski
Polish jazz saxophone player, composer and improviser
9
Acid Drinkers
Acid Drinkers
Polish thrash metal band
10
Raz, Dwa, Trzy
Raz, Dwa, Trzy
band that plays folk music
11
Lady Pank
Lady Pank
Polish band
12
Voo Voo
Voo Voo
Polish rock band
13
Wilki
Wilki
Polish rock band
14
Apostolis Anthimos
Apostolis Anthimos
Polish musician
15
Marcin Wasilewski
Marcin Wasilewski
Polish jazz musician
16
Hey
Hey
Polish band
17
O.S.T.R.
O.S.T.R.
Polish rapper
18
Farben Lehre
Farben Lehre
19
Closterkeller
Closterkeller
Polish musical group
20
Quebonafide
Quebonafide
Polish rapper, songwriter, and musician
21
2Tm2,3
2Tm2,3
22
Lech Janerka
Lech Janerka
Polish musician
23
O.N.A.
O.N.A.
Polish rock band
24
Maria Peszek
Maria Peszek
Polish actor and singer
25
Mela Koteluk
Mela Koteluk
Polish singer
26
Dezerter
Dezerter
band

SBB (first known as Silesian Blues Band, later as Szukaj, Burz, Buduj – Polish for "Search, Break up, Build") is a Polish progressive rock band formed in 1971 in Siemianowice, Upper Silesia. It consisted of multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Józef Skrzek, a young guitar player Apostolis Anthimos, the drummer Jerzy Piotrowski and sound engineer Grzegorz Maniecki. It was one of the most popular super-groups in Poland and Europe in the 1970s.

From 1971 until late 1973, SBB performed as Niemen supporting Czesław Wydrzycki. As group Niemen they performed at the, organized by Joachim-Ernst Berendt Rock & Jazz Now! opening show for the Olympic Games in Munich (next to Charles Mingus, John McLaughlin & Mahavishnu Orchestra and subsequently toured accompanying Jack Bruce. In Munich they recorded two LP's for CBS Records International, which started a long lasting friendship and cooperation with Reinhold Mack. Reinhold's son Julian Mack performed in 2005 on SBB's album New Century. SBB's cooperation with Niemen is presented on 5 albums.

The band was among the forerunners of progressive rock and jazz-rock and attracted many influential jazz musicians, who often performed with the band. The trumpeter Andrzej Przybielski and the saxophonist & bass clarinetist Tomasz Szukalski developed a long lasting relation with SBB.

The group regularly toured Czechoslovakia, East and West Germany, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Belgium, where in 1978 SBB won the OIRT award - the Gouden Zeezwaluw (Golden Seaswallow). The band split up in 1980, exactly 13 months before the onset of the martial law in Poland. Józef Skrzek, Tomasz Szukalski and the band's technical crew continued as Józef Skrzek - Tomasz Szukalski Duo and Józef Skrzek Formation taking part in the prophetic movie The War of the Worlds: Next Century produced 11 months before the introduction of the martial law in Poland. After the onset of martial law Apostolis Anthimos joined the jazz trompeter Tomasz Stańko and the Greek band of George Dalaras, Jerzy Piotrowski joined or supported various bands, e.g. Kombi, Young Power, Krzak, Martyna Jakubowicz and Stanisław Sojka and Józef Skrzek performed mainly organ music at sacral buildings.

SBB was briefly re-activated after WRON suspended the martial law in Poland in 1991, 1993, 1998 and finally in 2000. After reactivation SBB also briefly toured the United States (1994, drummer Jerzy Piotrowski stayed in the USA) and Russia and in 2006 performed as a highlight at the Baja Prog festival in Mexicali, Mexico (with the drummer Paul Wertico). From 2016 Michał Urbaniak started to support the band.