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Artist
Between a poet mother and a lawyer father – defender, among others, of Hara-Kiri (predecessor of Charlie Hebdo) – Caloé has something to hold on to! But this independence of spirit and this almost "congenital" taste for freedom, which finds its embodiment in her approach to music, will not constitute the only sources from which the artist will drink. Raised in a family of music lovers, rocked by classical music and French songs from her earliest childhood, she discovered herself as a musician at the age of 4, choosing the violin. Very quickly, improvisation will become part of her language. She takes the instrument out of its box whenever the opportunity arises, to accompany a text by her mother or a guitarist who passes by, before discovering jazz as a teenager. This music will never leave her. But the singularity of this career did not immediately lead her to dream of being a jazz singer, since she first studied opera singing (at the École Normale in Paris) as well as the jazz violin, with Pierre Blanchard. Gradually, she tamed her art and forged a style over the course of experiences and encounters, such as with the musicians of the Hot Sugar Band, a swing dance group with which she traveled on the roads of France and Europe, definitively dropping the violin to devote herself fully to her new instrument: the voice. In order to develop her own language, Caloé wants to confront the roots. She then decides to go on a trip, on the other side of the ocean. Roots of Jazz