[1] In its first incarnation, the band also included David Koller on drums, Jan Ivan Wünsch on bass, and Bohumil and Vladimír Zatloukal on guitars, as well as a duo of "screaming" female backing vocalists, Zdena Pištěková and Markéta Vojtěchová.
As the newly established group began to play, evading the ban placed on their previous instantiation, they were joined by a third female singer, Alena Daňková.
A year later, Reflex Records issued the compilation Starý pecky (a tak dál…) and in 1995, the band's third studio effort, Maják, was released by Bonton Music.
On 1 June 1999, Jan Ivan Wünsch died, shortly before a charity concert for Kosovo, which Hudba Praha was supposed to participate in, after a three-year hiatus.
[2] They toured and performed numerous concerts in the subsequent years, and in 2006, by then known as Jasná Páka/Hudba Praha, the band celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary and was inducted into the Beat Hall of Fame.
In 2008, Michal Ambrož and Vladimír Zatloukal officially reformed Jasná Páka as a separate group, together with David Koller and several new members.
[2] As for Hudba Praha, the group underwent a number of lineup changes, with Ludvík Kandl being replaced by Michael "Šimon" Šimůnek and Karolina Skalníková taking the place of Daniela Čelková.
She was in turn replaced by Petra Studená, and singer and artist Petr Váša began making regular guest appearances with the group.
[3][4] That year, apart from disagreements within Hudba Praha, Ambrož began to experience severe symptoms of an illness, and all his projects were subsequently put on hold.
The second group that emerged from Hudba Praha's split went by the name Michal Ambrož a Hudba Praha, which, apart from its titular leader, included frequent guest David Koller on drums; Michal Pelant and Radovan Jelínek on guitars; Jakub Vejnar on bass; Martin Kopřiva on drums; Matěj Belko on guitar and keyboards; Jakub Doležal on tenor saxophone; and Markéta Tošovská Foukalová and Tereza Kopáčková on vocals.
He hosted the shows Kalumet and Naděje Beatu on Radio Beat[8] and in 2016, recorded the album Srdeční příběh, which was produced by David Koller.
It included contributions from various musicians connected to Ambrož's career, such as violinist Radovan Jelínek and vocalists Magdaléna Krištofeková, Pavla Táboříková, and Jarmila Koblicová, as well as others, such as drummer Martin Valihora and singer Richard Müller.