Ramón Sender BarayónRamón Sender Barayón is a central figure in the history of the greater Bay Area counterculture: electronic music pioneer, co-producer of the Trips Festival in San Francisco, consigliere and chief remembrancer of Morning Star and Wheeler Ranch commune. Born in Spain in 1934, an undocumented refugee until age 12, he is a living link between the radical communal traditions of the Old and the New World through his father, the Spanish Republican novelist Ramón J. Sender, and his first wife's great grandfather, John Humphrey Noyes, founder of the nineteenth century religious utopian Oneida Community, by way of the authoritarian communism of the Bruderhof. In exile from fascist Spain with his father and sister-as citizens of the planet, without attachments... radical cosmopoli-tans, Ramón fetched up in New York City where he began his music studies before continuing at the San Francisco Conservatory and Mills College -- from Iain Boal's introduction in West of Eden: Communes and Utopia in Northern California (PM Press, 2011) Read More Read Less
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