The Williams College Department of Music presents Zafarán. This event is free and open to the public.
Zafarán crosses time and boundaries, and incorporates musical traditions from around the Mediterranean, weaving together such diverse threads as Southern Italian chants, Sephardic love songs, Romani laments, and Turkish and Greek folk tunes. With driving rhythms, virtuosic improvisation, and the powerful voice of award-winning Italian singer Carmen Marsico, Zafarán bridges languages and cultures with their own eclectic blend of musical styles, combining deep traditions with original songs and ideas.
Formed in 2020 as a border-crossing collaboration between musicians from Italy, Sweden, and the USA, this international ensemble is based in Boston and Rome. Zafarán recorded its first album in Rome in 2022, and will be releasing it in 2024.
The word “zafarán” comes from Arabic via old Persian, meaning “yellow” or “saffron”. The most precious of all spices, saffron has been cultivated in the Mediterranean basin since ancient times. In Lucania, Carmen’s native region, the local dialect uses “zafarán” to refer to the long, sweet red peppers from Senise (PZ), famous throughout Italy and beyond.
In Chapin Hall.