Beni Sape Sibiu 'link' ◎
The show usually starts late, around 10:30 PM. The room is thick with cigarette smoke (mostly indoors, despite bans) and palinca (a potent plum brandy). Beni walks through the crowd silently, tuning his pegs. He rarely speaks. He simply raises his bow.
Play it loud. Play it with soul. Beni Sape Sibiu, Gypsy Jazz, Romanian music, Transylvania, Jazz Manouche, Lăutari, Sibiu nightlife, Violin music, World music. beni sape sibiu
"I am not a museum piece," he said in a recent interview for Songlines Magazine . "My grandfather played for weddings in the mud. I play for festivals on the moon. The music must live. If it doesn't swing, it is dead." To hear Beni Sape Sibiu is to understand Transylvania not as a land of vampires and horror, but as a land of passion, resilience, and raw, unadulterated joy. It is the sound of a minority culture taking the tools given to them—a wooden box, a bow, some horsehair—and creating a global language. The show usually starts late, around 10:30 PM
If you ever find yourself walking the cobblestones near the Evangelical Cathedral, and you hear the distant wail of a violin fighting against a double bass, follow it. You will find a crowd of strangers hugging each other, crying and laughing at the same time, swaying under the streetlights. He rarely speaks
In 2022, he was invited to play with the . The show was called "From the Campfire to the Concert Hall." For the first half, the orchestra played Brahms. For the second half, Beni walked out in traditional Roma garb (black vest, wide trousers, a fedora) and deconstructed Brahms’ Hungarian Dances back into the folk music Brahms had stolen them from. It was a radical act of reclamation.
Beni has often stated in interviews (translated from Romanian) that the city taught him restraint. "In traditional Roma music," he says, "we play fast to get tips. But in Sibiu, you must play beautiful . You must let the note breathe in the cold Transylvanian air before you cut it with the next."
For the uninitiated, the name might sound like a forgotten chapter from a Balkan folk tale. In reality, Beni Sape (born Beniamin Sape) is the electrifying violinist and bandleader who has redefined what Roma (Gypsy) music means in the 21st century. Based in Sibiu, the 2007 European Capital of Culture, this ensemble has transcended the clichés of restaurant serenades to create a high-octane, emotionally devastating fusion of Lăutari traditions, Django Reinhardt’s Jazz Manouche , and modern improvisation.
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