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Bridge Between Generations
THE NEW WORLD BAROQUE ORCHESTRA
by Eric Greening
Two and a quarter centuries ago, the aboriginal peace of our Central Coast was briefly
interrupted by the passage of hundreds of people, along with their horses, cows, and
other livestock. This multiethnic group of colonists and their families, led by Juan
Bautista Anza, celebrated each day's progress by dancing in camp. With violin and psaltery,
they filled the night air with dance tunes never before heard in these parts. Wide-spreading
oaks that had, for centuries, grown used to the speech and song of the Chumash and
Salinan Native Americans now heard lively quadrillos (ancestral square dances) called out
in Spanish.
For several generations, the descendants of the long-journeying settlers would be famed for
their endless dance parties. As other waves of immigrants arrived, new types of music
superseded the old, which fell into obscurity. Then, for well over a century, the old tunes
slumbered. Now, thanks to a unique intergenerational collaboration, they have burst back to
full and vibrant life, right here on the Central Coast.
The New World Baroque Orchestra, directed by John Warren of Paso Robles, has, for the last
five years, kept the dances of the Joseph Maria Garcia Manuscript at the heart of its
repertoire. This manuscript, currently in the Braun Research Library at the Southwest Museum
of Los Angeles, belonged, in 1772, to a gentleman of Chalco, Mexico, and also slumbered in obscurity until found in a village store by the eminent musicologist Eleanor Hague
(1875-1954). This has allowed John Warren to work his way through the manuscript, harmonizing
and orchestrating the line melodies it contains, so that his consort can immerse listeners
in the sounds of Anza's time.
Since the manuscript's tunes betray seemingly improbable origins and influences spanning
the globe from Scotland to China, the orchestra's repertoire can branch in many directions
while remaining relevant to the unifying thread of the Joseph Maria Garcia Manuscript. Old
World composers of the Renaissance, Baroque, and Classical periods, from Cristobal de Morales
to Franz Schubert, from Handel to Luis Mison, were heard in Baroque Mexico and Alta
California, or influenced composers there. These composers, such as Antonio Salazar,
Juan de Vaeza Saavedra, and California padres like Juan Sancho (whose Misa en Sol John
Warren has hand-copied from the manuscript at Stanford University and thus restored to life),
and Narciso Durau, also reach modern ears through the Consort's
efforts, as do hymns of the North American Shape-Note tradition, and even Klezmer
tunes.
The New World Baroque Orchestra is unique not only for the breadth of its repertoire, but
in its genuinely intergenerational character. Young people participate in its music-making
as honored equals, and are always welcome in its audiences, but it is not a youth group per
se, for seasoned performers, and elders in the audience, are equally important and honored.
The dance programs involve a similar collaboration between the generations, with California
elders like Enriqueta Vacio and Consuelo Ramirez teaching a living heritage of song and dance
to the Cabrera Family of Santa Barbara, who, in turn, pass on these cultural riches to
elementary school students in their area. Our modern era is often dominated by monolithic
educational systems that often segregate their students from living culture-bearers and from
the rest of society, but the New World Baroque Orchestra swims against this tide, seeking to
integrate the generations, and to allow the young to claim the cultural riches of the
past as their living and rightful inheritance.
Still another unique feature of the Orchestra is its use of historic replica instruments
(harpsichord and tenor and treble viols) hand-crafted locally by Haldon Chase of rural Paso
Robles, and of a baroque cello created by Jim Wimmer of Santa Barbara.
The wide-spreading oaks have heard little Chumash or Salinan in the last two centuries. Of
late, they have heard more motor sounds than human sounds. But on a special magical evening,
when the New World Baroque Orchestra performs, the hope to is serenade them with the dances
that were once new to these parts, and are now a rediscovered part of our history and
identity.
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