From Serra to Sancho
Music and Pageantry in the California Missions
Russell, Craig H.,
California Polytechnic State University
Print publication date: 2009
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-534327-4 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195343274.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
Music in the California missions was a pluralistic combination of voices and instruments, of liturgy and spectacle, of styles and functions—and even of cultures—in a new blend that was nonexistent before the friars made their way to California beginning in 1769. This book explores the exquisite sacred music that flourished on the West Coast of America when it was under Spanish and Mexican rule; it delves into the historical, cultural, biographical, and stylistic aspects of California mission music during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Aspects of music terminology, performance practice, notation, theory, sacred song, hymns, the sequence, the mass, and pageantry are addressed. The book explores how mellifluous plainchant, reverent hymns, spunky folkloric ditties, “Classical” music in the style of Haydn, and even Native American drumming were interwoven into a tapestry of resonant beauty. The book examines such things as style, scribal attribution, instructions to musicians, government questionnaires, invoices, the liturgy, architectural space where performances took place, spectacle, musical instruments, instrument construction, shipping records, travelers' accounts, letters, diaries, passenger lists, baptismal and burial records, and other primary source material. Within this book one finds considerable biographical information about Junípero Serra, Juan Bautista Sancho, Narciso Durán, Florencio Ibáñez, Pedro Cabot, Martín de Cruzelaegui, Ignacio de Jerusalem, and Francisco Javier García Fajer. Furthermore, it contains five far-reaching appendices: a Catalogue of California Mission Sources; Photos of Missions and Mission Manuscripts (with more than 150 color facsimiles); Translations of Primary Texts; Music Editions (that are performance-ready); and an extensive bibliography.
Keywords: sacred music, mission music, California missions, performance practice, music notation, music theory, Junípero Serra, Juan Bautista Sancho, Ignacio de Jerusalem, liturgy, musical instruments Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1.
Musical Style and Performance in Mission Life
Chapter 2.
Notation and Music Theory
Chapter 3.
Serra and the Introduction of Sacred Song
Chapter 4.
Sacred Celebration
Chapter 5.
Juan Bautista Sancho
Chapter 6.
Music for the Mass
Chapter 7.
Classical Masses for Voices and Orchestra by Ignacio de Jerusalem and García Fajer
Epilogue
Appendix
Index
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