Our music was neither popular nor simple. Yet it helped erode the regime
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Martin Kratochvíl was born on 22 May 1946 in Prague into a family with a strong business and cultural tradition. After the communist coup, his relatives were also repressed - his maternal grandfather Karel Kaplan was imprisoned in the Jáchymov camps and his father Oldřich Kratochvíl had to leave his clerical job and work manually. However, his parents supported his education: they led their sons to English, music and independence. After graduating from secondary building technical school, he briefly studied at the Czech Technical University, then went on to the Faculty of Arts of Charles University, majoring in philosophy, where he studied in the extraordinary atmosphere of the 1960s being taught by such personalities as Jan Patočka and Václav Černý. August 1968 found him returning from a year in London; he decided to stay in Czechoslovakia and completed his studies with a doctorate in 1972. At the same time, he devoted himself fully to music. With the group Jazz Q he was one of the pioneers of modern jazz, performing at home and in the West, for example in 1969 the group won an award at the San Sebastian festival. Although jazz music was tolerated by the regime as the music of the „oppressed black people“, he believed that the concerts brought an atmosphere of freedom and, between the lines, anti-regime protest. The concerts were monitored by State Security and at times the band was on the verge of being banned. In 1976-1977, the witness studied at Berklee College of Music in the USA. Upon his return, State Security tried without success to get him to cooperate; he was registered as a candidate for secret cooperation under the code name „Primáš“. He had friends among the signatories of Charter 77, and married Magdalena Kocábová, daughter of the evangelical priest Alfréd Kocáb. They had two daughters, but the marriage ended in divorce. During the period of normalisation, he built the private Studio Budíkov in Mnichovice and devoted himself to film music. Before 1989, he co-founded the company Bonton, which became a major music and media publishing house after the fall of the regime. Besides music, he has long been involved in mountaineering and documentary filming, especially in the Himalayas. Martin Kratochvíl is the founder and chairman of the business and debating Golem Club.