Description: Music in the California missions was a pluralistic combination of voices and instruments, of liturgy & spectacle, of styles and functions--and even of cultures--in a new blend that was non-existent before the Franciscan friars' arrival in 1769. This book explores aesthetic, stylistic, historical, cultural, theoretical, liturgical, & biographical aspects of this repertoire. Contains a "Catalogue of Mission Manuscripts," 150+ facsimiles, translations of primary documents, & performance-ready music reconstructions.
Review Quotes: "Russell is, in my estimation the leading expert on music of the Hispanic-American world, and this is a major contribution to our knowledge of a music and a period long forgotten." --American Organist
in doing both...From Serra to Sancho has been a monumental undertaking, one that will propel forward a new generation of scholarship on mission music and enable audiences to appreciate once again the richness of this musical repertory." --Eighteenth-Century Music
"Russell's work raises the possibility of a cultural revival of a tradition unjustly robbed from California, first by the Mexican usurpation, then by the American annexation. Is it too late for California to re-capture the tradition of its spiritual, liturgical, and proto-cultural patrimony? Thanks to the work of Craig H. Russell, perhaps the clock still ticks. Blessed Junipero Serra, ora pro nobis!" --Usus Antiquior"The book has much to offer musicologists and historians alike, based as it is on careful research at many different California archives, as well as the insight of someone who has devoted much of his career to arranging and performing mission music. The companion website...is a welcome addition and provides a model for other book websites...The book belongs on the shelf of all scholars of the period." --Southern California Quarterly"Makes a substantial contribution to American, Mexican, and Spanish music history...People interested in the music of the California missions finally have a dependable source of historical information for both the mind and the ear to ponder." --Notes"A generally magnificent piece of scholarship...The author has succeeded in writiing a "human narrative."" --American Catholic Studies"A milestone in the historiography of mission music, and many scholars and performers will return to it frequently after the first reading. This outstanding study will be welcomed not only by readers interested in the early music history of the United States and Mexico, but also by readers and performers on both sides of the Atlantic." --Journal of the Society for American Music