PITTSVILLE -- Every once in a rare while comes a singer with such an extraordinary voice and uncommon musical gift that it touches deeply the souls of all who hear her.
Ariane Lydon is such a discovery. She will perform at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Pittsville Auditorium, 5459 Elementary Ave.
Lydon's virtuosic touch on 12- and 6-string guitar, keyboards, Celtic harp, and bodhran come from a long apprenticeship in music across three continents. Born in Sussex, England, to a British civil servant and a New York artist, Lydon lived in Santiago, Chile, until she was 10.
Her mother, a daughter of a jazz and ragtime pianist, immersed Ariane in classical piano music from age 7. Both parents, ethnomusicologists at heart, introduced her to an extensive range of classical and ethnic music from countries they had lived in and visited all over the world. The family could often be found singing in four-part harmony, playing musical instruments, and enjoying live performances.
Forced to leave the country a year after the 1973 assassination of Chilean president Salvador Allende, the Lydon family brought back many Spanish recordings of that country in turmoil. With a move to Geneva, Switzerland, and then across the border into France, Ariane's cultural base expanded to include the popular and folk music of Western Europe.
Her training as a classical pianist led to a second-place finish at the International Piano Competition in Paris (Concours Nerini) at age 14. Her own interest in composing began to manifest itself at the popular daily jam sessions she co-founded at the International Lycée with a fellow piano student.
However, a desire to study marine biology took her to southern England for three years where, unable to access a suitable piano, she turned her attention back to stringed instruments.
Driven by an innate need to create and collect music, Ariane taught herself steel-stringed guitar to accompany her singing. Joining the Worthing 6th Form College choir and becoming a fixture at the local pub sessions fueled the desire to increase her knowledge of the music of her Welsh, British and Irish roots.
Lydon traveled to upstate New York in 1983 to attend college. The undercurrent of music was still strong, and her interest in American folk music was quickly nurtured by American family members, all musicians themselves. It was Lena Spencer who booked Lydon and hammer dulcimer virtuoso Jem Moore at her famous Café Lena's in Saratoga Springs, New York. Upon hearing Ariane sing, Spencer insisted: "This is a voice the world needs to hear."
In the last 12 years, she has performed in 40 states.
Tickets for the Lydon concert are $10 for adults, $8 for seniors and $5 for students. For more information, call 715-884-6502.
Courtesy of www.arianelydon.com and Lucille Tack Center for the Arts.