“We’ve long thought Western culture was the most important, looking down on other cultures just as valuable,” Jordi Savall says. “Today, we can discover these other cultures and that’s how I think the future of music will be built: on dialogue, on respect for other cultures, uniting great musicians from different traditions.”
Born in 1941 in Catalonia, a stronghold of Republicanism that had suffered heavily under Franco’s fascist troops in the civil war, Savall learned to sing in a choir and, inspired by another great Catalan, Pablo Casals, took up the cello, graduating from the Barcelona Conservatory in 1965. From there he traced the cello’s roots back to the viola da gamba, which for 300 years was the most important stringed instrument in Europe, but which has been all but…
