Panderoza

Panderoza in 2019 Panderoza was formerly a music club, now a fruit press, located at Street Korycińska 34 in Janów.

In 1991, the first private disco in Poland was established in Janów, near Korycin. Many disco polo bands, such as Grzegorz Szarkowski's Avanti group, began their careers there. The band performed on the stage of Panderoza for years. Leszek Skibicki opened the disco at the age of 24, along with the Suszycki brothers, Mirosław and Jerzy. They bought an area from the commune half a kilometer outside Janów, on the road to Korycin. Skibicki and the Suszycki took the name from the American western TV show Bonanza, from the Panderossa ranch. The brothers Polonized the name, and Panderoza was born. The club was most popular from 1991 until 2001, hosting young people from all over the Polish province, with 2 parking lots filled with Ladas and Polonaises. In the first years of the club's operation, summer games took place 3 times a week, on Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays. The location provided many jobs to the community, including at three bars, at cash registers, or in security. At the beginning, Warsaw bands played there, e.g. Maxim. After some time, the owners began to promote those from Podlachia. All the bands that later counted on the disco polo music market played on the stage of Panderoza. The owners of the club made careers for little-known bands by inviting them to play at the Panderoza. Mirosław Suszycki already had a record label at that time, and was also the manager of the band Akcent. The partners of Panderoza, but especially Suszycki, particularly favored Zenon Martyniuk's band. A well-known Polish music journalist Marek Sierocki once had the opportunity to run a disco there with a report on Polish television in the program TVP1. In 2015, Leszek Skibicki converted the disco into a fruit press.

In 1998, Polish director Jacek Bromski shot scenes for the film "U Pana Boga za piecem" ("God's Garden") at Panderoza.