SZABADSÁG
[pronounce sa-bad-chag]
Traditional music hold the soul of the world. Colored by its History, marvelous or tragic, they preserve an heritage, ensure its transmission through times.
Szabadság gathers Ariane Cohen-Adad, violinist franco-sephardi and Jefferson Louvat, mandolinist belgo-hungarian. Together they cross their routes blending music from Eastern Europe, Klezmer-Balkans with those from Northern America, Bluegrass and Irish folk.
Ariane Cohen-Adad : violin, viola, 5-string fiddle, vocals
Jefferson Louvat : mandolin, mandola, mandocello
Jefferson Louvat : mandolin, mandola, mandocello
Ariane Cohen-Adad : violin, viola, 5-string fiddle, vocals
In the heart of the musical expression, Ariane develops a sensitive violin style of play having no boundaries. At age seven, she begins her classical violin studies bringing her a first prize at the Lyon Academy of Music. At fifteen, her dad introduces her to Klezmer music through different projects including theatre, yiddish songs and tales. The band Dibouk, burnt with that flame, performed countless concerts, dancing parties, workshops based on oral transmission of the yiddish culture. With Quintet Bumbac, (www.quintetbumbac.com), string quintet playing music from the Balkans, Ariane travels all across France honoring string and bow intruments and their subtleries. (www.quintetbumbac.com)
With her rich and eclectic backgrounds, she has experienced other musical aesthetics (classical orchestra, chamber and modern music, European and American traditional music, improvisation sessions) as well as other art forms (danse, theatre). Ariane has also a degree in musicology (Sorbonne, Paris) and a double diploma for the teaching of the classical violin and traditional music (CEFEDEM, Lyon).