Saturday, November 2, 2013

Mission San Juan Bautista & Father Tápis's Color Music System

Parts of the Alfred Hitchcock movie 'Vertigo' were filmed at Mission San Juan Bautista in California. I looked up that location on Wikipedia and came upon the following quote:


'Father Pedro Estévan Tápis (who had a special talent for music) joined Father Felipe Arroyo de la Cuesta, at Mission San Juan Bautista in 1815 to teach singing to the Indians. He employed a system of notation developed in Spain that uses varied colors or textures for polyphonic music, usually (from bottom to top) solid black, solid red, black outline (sometimes solid yellow) and red outline (or black outline when yellow was used). His choir of Native American boys performed for many visitors, earning the San Juan Bautista Mission the nickname "the Mission of Music." Two of his handwritten choir books are preserved at the San Juan Bautista Museum. When Father Tapis died in 1825 he was buried on the mission grounds. The town of San Juan Bautista, which grew up around the mission, expanded rapidly during the California Gold Rush and continues to be a thriving community today.'


I'd like to see samples of written music using colors to communicate specific notes, but was unable to locate images or further information on Father Tapis's choir books.

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